05-15-15 - Cedar Street Times
Transcription
05-15-15 - Cedar Street Times
In This Issue Kiosk • Through June 14 Illustrating Nature PG Museum 165 Forest Ave., Pacific Grove. • Fri. May 22 Stillwell’s Children’s Pool at Lovers Point Opens • Sat. May 23 Memoria Day Dinner’Marina Foundation 694 Legion Way’Marina $25 831-717-4117 • Mon. May 25 Black Sheep - Page 12 Hanging Out - Page 3 Pacific Grove’s Times Memorial Day Celebration Mission Memorial 1915 Ord Ave., Seaside 11 AM 831-394-1481 • Wed. May 27 Dine Out With Friends Taste Café & Bistro 1199 Forest Ave., Pacific Grove 831-655-0324 Open for lunch and dinner 11:30AM – 2:30PM and 5:00PM to Close A portion of your check will be donated to support the Pacific Grove Library • May 22-28, 2015 Your Community NEWSpaper Dancing in Remembrance Sat. May 30 PG POPS Concert 2 PM Performing Arts Center No cost • Sat. May 30 Candid Camera with Peter Funt Performing Arts Center See page 18 $35 • Fri, June 12 50th Anniversary Pacific Grove Discovery Shop 198Country Club Gate 11am • Sat. June 13 Corner Sale Benefitting The Bridge 9 AM - 3 PM “Like” us on Facebook where we post short updates, traffic, weather, fun pictures and timely stuff. If you follow us on Twitter, you’ll also get Sports updates and we even tweet tournaments and playoffs from time to time. For more live music events try www.kikiwow.com Inside 100 Years Ago in Pacific Grove........... 6 Animal Tales & Other Random Thoughts............... 11 Cartoon.............................................. 2 Cop Log........................................ dark FYI................................................... 19 Homeless in Paradise......................... 8 Keepers of Our Culture.................... 12 Legal Notices................................... 16 Marriage Can Be Funny.................... 16 Otter Views...................................... 11 Rainfall.............................................. 2 Sports.............................................. 15 Heritage Homes - Page 14 Monterey Bay Lion Dancers led the Walk of Remembrance last week, honoring the Chinese Fishing Village which once existed on our shores. Photo by Marge Brigadier Vol. VII, Issue 36 Sewage Spill on Ocean View at MRWPCA Pump The 220,000-gallon sewage spill which occurred Monday, May 18 was bad enough, but it could have been a lot worse. The accident occurred when a subcontractor was working on a bypass to enable staff to perform routine maintenance inside the pump station at 15th and Central in Pacific Grove. A discharge valve did not seal and the pump station quickly filled with wastewater. One choice PCA workers had at that point was to allow the wastewater to fill the pump station and destroy electrical components and pumping equipment, which would result in an extended outage, overflowing the pump station and allowing wastewater to flow down across the Rec Trail and into the ocean.The other choice was what the man on the spot did: Control the discharge through a pipe and allow it to be released into the ocean. The release began at 10:42 a.m. The “all clear” was given at 6:00 p.m. Clean-up continues today, as water inside the pump station is vacuumed out. But there's no way to clean the bay. One question on most locals' minds is “how long will the bay between Lovers Point and Hopkins Marine will be unsafe to use?” The answer, given that it all depends on Mother Nature, may be surprising. Paul Sciuto, Deputy General Manager of the MRWPCA, says it might even be safe by this weekend – Memorial Day weekend, when thousands of tourists will be in town. They have already taken seven tests and will continue sampling until they get All The News That Fits, We Print We post as many as five new stories on our website every day. If you don’t get our Facebook updates or our bulletins which go to subscribers, you might want to think about checking our website now and then. We print on Fridays and distribute to more than 150 sites. Please see www.cedarstreettimes.com Baseball: Breakers Open up CCS Division II Playoffs at Monterey Sewage Spill SEWER UPDATE: IT’S FIXED SEWAGE SPILL UPDATE MST Memorial Day Bus Schedules Sewer Emergency Monday 5/18/15 11:55 A.M Big Bat at a Big Conference Shelter Outreach Plus Creates 100 @ 100 Project to Raise Urgently Needed Funds Red Cross Central Coast Volunteer Deploys to Provide Disaster Relief in Guam Zack Miller Runs and Jumps his way to the CCS Semis; Wins Three Events at the MTAL Track and Field Finals Cone Zone Report: May 17-24 Pacific Grove Mayor Reminds Us of Drought Measures Cyber Safety Checklist for Parents of Teens Sheriff’s Office Reports Arrest in February Bomb Threat Made Online SPCA for Monterey County Using Finding Rover Facial Recognition App See SEWER Page 13 Holman Lot Division OK’d The division of the lot where the Holman Building sits has been approved on appeal by the City Council. The division had original been denied by the planning department on a 3-3 split, but on appeal it won unanimous approval. The lot split allows the developers to first obtain an assessor’s parcel number for the new lot, then work with the City planning department to approve plans. The sale of the Holman parcel by current owner Nader Agha is already far along in the process. In the meantime, Pacific Grove’s planning and economic development chief Mark Brodeur will be hard at work refining a condominium ordinance for the new parcel. “The condo ordinance will go to the City Council,” he said. “The plans will be run through the Historic Resources Commission and Architectural Review Board, then City Council,” he added. The developers are all “local guys.” Craig Bell (owner of First Awakenings restaurant), Matt Tanzi and Dave Gash are lifelong friends who grew up in Pacific Grove. Their firm is Monterey Capital Corp. For their part, they will also need to do the environmental documentation. At a meeting hosted by the Chamber of Commerce on Thursday morning, May 21, Gash told how he had painted W. R. See HOLMAN Page 13 Page 2 • CEDAR STREET Times • May 22, 2015 Joan Skillman Veterans’ Transition Center Show Coming Skillshots Great registrations are coming in for the Veterans Transition Center’s second annual FREE Memorial Day Car Show, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. May 23 at Martinez Hall, 220 12th St., Marina—just off the Imjin exit, on historic Fort Ord. There will be a bounce house, poker walk, barbeque, band, disk jockey, food and craft vendors, raffle and Color Guard. On display will be 1979 and older classic cars and trucks, and bikes from all years. Early registration fee is $40. Saturday, registration opens at 7 a.m. and fee is $45. Trophies will go to first, second and third place winners and there will be seven Awards of Excellence. To register your vehicle or bike, visit www.VTCMonterey.org. All proceeds go to the nonprofit Veterans Transition Center for our homeless veterans. Since 1998, the VTC has been successfully rehabbing old housing at Ft. Ord, and lives, for America’s veterans. Free Concert by PG Pops LUNCH Monterey County’s Best Locals’ Menu! & DINN 9 ER $ 95 EVERY D AY! • Parmesan Crusted Chicken • • Fresh Catch of the Day • • Mile-High Meatloaf • • Grilled Calamari Steak • • Italian Sausage Pasta Saute • • Flame Broiled Pork Loin Chop • Add a Glass of Draft Beer of House Wine —Just $2.99 Monday—Thursday, 2 Hours Free Parking Courtesy of the City of Monterey www.abalonettimonterey.com 57 Fisherman’s Wharf, Monterey Call (831) 373-1851 PG Pops Orchestra will present a free concert on Saturday, May 30 at 2:00 p.m., at the Performing Arts Center of Pacific Grove, 835 Forest Avenue, Pacific Grove. Conductor Barbara Priest will lead music from Tower of Power, Louis Armstrong, and marches from “Star Wars” and Tchaikovsky with a concert prelude by a local string chamber music group and The Monterey French Horn Ensemble. Please join us for the finale concert of our second season. The Pacific Grove Pops Orchestra is a non profit organization funded by its musician members. Donations made at this free concert will be gratefully appreciated. ar Award staurant of the Ye Re PG 10 20 e th of Winner T he Finest Go u r m et Pi z z a WE BAKE OR YOU BAKE Try the Peninsula’s Best Gluten-Free Crust Must present current coupon to get discount. Not combinable with other offers. EXPIRES 6/22/15 WE DELIVER! (831) 643-1111 1157 Forest Ave., #D (across from Trader Joe’s) Times Cedar Street Times was established September 1, 2008 and was adjudicated a legal newspaper for Pacific Grove, Monterey County, California on July 16, 2010. It is published weekly at 306 Grand Ave., Pacific Grove, CA 93950. Press deadline is Wednesday, noon. The paper is distributed on Friday and is available at various locations throughout the county as well as by e-mail subscription. Editor/Publisher: Marge Ann Jameson Graphics: Shelby Birch Regular Contributors: Ben Alexander • Susan Alexander • Jack Beigle • Jon Charron• Rabia Erduman • Dana Goforth • Jonathan Guthrie Kyle Krasa • Dixie Layne • Travis Long • Dorothy Maras-Ildiz • Neil Jameson • Peter Nichols • Jean Prock • Jane Roland • Katie Shain • Joan Skillman • Tom Stevens Distribution: Ken Olsen, Shelby Birch Cedar Street Irregulars Ava, Bella G, Benjamin, Cameron, Coleman, Connor, Dezi, Jesse, John, Kai, Kyle, Jacob, Josh, Josh, Meena, Nathan, Ryan, Shay 831.324.4742 Voice 831.324.4745 Fax editor@cedarstreettimes.com Calendar items to: cedarstreettimes@gmail.com website: www.cedarstreetimes.com Mon-Thu 4-9:30PM • Fri-Sat 11-10PM • Sun 12-9:30PM www.PIZZA-MYWAY.com Pcific Grove’s Rain Gauge Data reported by Jack Beigle from Canterbury Woods Week ending 5-21-15...........................0. 02” Total for the season.............................19.38” To date last year..................................11.58” The historic average to this date is .....18.58” Wettest year..................................................47.15” During rain year 07-01-7 through 06-30-98 Driest year....................................................4.013” During rain year 07-01-12 through 06-30-13 May 22, 2015 • CEDAR STREET Times • Page 3 A Man and a Bat: Dispelling Rumors in Monterey By Marge Ann Jameson What do astronauts, musicians, inventors, photographers, mythbusters, magicians, aviators, archeologists, a 100 year-old cardiologist, Alan Turing experts, and a great big bat all have in common? EG Conference. It’s like sitting with a few hundred of your close friends watching a threeday marathon of ‘Nature,” “Quest,” and “Nova”...live. Sipping a glass of wine and touching 3-D printed artifacts. Artists, inventors, designers, educators, film makers, explorers. Imagine Oliver Steeds with clothes on. Asking questions, being inspired. Rubbing elbows with Jill Sobule and being able to ask Adam Savage about outtakes on “Mythbusters.” You might even get personal instruction on your new drone from Eric Cheng. EG Conference is a well-kept secret. “EG is an intimate annual conference of the most creative talents in our culture, makers and doers, sharing insight and drawing inspiration,” says their Twitter page. And if you have $4,000 for the ticket, you’ll become a follower, too. Front and center of this year’s conference (the ninth annual, and held in Monterey) was Fred. Fred is a Malayan Flying Fox, a member of the species known to be the biggest bats in the world. His handler, Rob Mies, is executive director of the Organization for Bat Conservation, based in Michigan, and he serves as advisor and member of many other bat- and conservation-oriented organizations. We met during the dinner break after Rob had given his talk and Fred was settling down in his cage with his bat friends. Mies pointed out that bats are extremely important to the lives of humans and other species on Earth because they pollinate crops like bananas and avocados, eat billions of insects, and spread seeds. But they’re not beautiful like butterflies and they don’t make honey like bees, so they tend not to get the attention bees and butterflies do. In fact, the unfortunate misunderstood bat is pretty far down on most lists of desirable neighbors, mostly because of bat myths. Even as we headed for a quiet corner to complete our interview, people came up to Rob and asked some of the usual questions: Don’t bats have rabies? (No, only about one percent contract rabies – and it kills them. You’re more likely, to the tune of 65,000 cases per year, to get rabies from a dog.) Are they blind? Won’t they get tangled up in your hair? (Bats are not blind. They fly at night and they use echolocation to navigate. They’re afraid of people and will not willingly approach humans. And they don’t build nests so they have no use for your hair.) What about vampire bats? (Yes, there are three species of the more than 1300 species of bat that will lick blood from cows and other animals. They live in Central and South America.) On a visit to Viet Nam, I was privileged to see trees full of Malayan flying foxes like Fred, hanging upside down, waiting for nightfall. Like Fred, their wiry hair is dark in color and they weigh just a few pounds. But their thin, leathery wings, which have claws at key spots, can spread to six feet. They’re not particularly friendly and they don’t bond with humans, but they are tolerant. The worst horror stories I heard there were about local children Little brown bat nose syndrome. Leave “snags” standing as a roost for bats and many other species which search out dead trees as homes and food sources. Plant moth-attracting wildflower gardens to help attract bugs for the bats to eat. Garden organically without using pesticides. And donate to bat conservation causes. Rob mentioned the Pollinator Project, which is a 501 (c) 3, Burt’s Bees and Trader Joe’s as business partners in the effort to save the pollinators. Rob Mies hangs out with Fred the Malayan Flying Fox, Below, wth Conan O’Brien on his tV show. capturing the bats and prying their teeth out to make them into pets. Fred’s cage-mates on this trip to the EG Conference included a “big brown bat” which is not really very big at all. It has velvety hair and is about the size of a mouse, minus its wings. The paper-thin wings feel like a stretched balloon. Rob handles them all with thick gloves to keep them from accidentally scratching his hands and arms. Rob handles Fred at will because Fred came to the bat conservation team as a rescue – his wing was broken and he will never fly again. Fred has become an ambassador instead. He will live to the age of 20 or even 30. The conservation center has some 200 bats of many species which are all rescues. They do not breed bats at the facility. But like so many other beneficial animals, birds, and insects, bats are disappearing. The main reasons for the disappearance of bats are habitat loss, poisoning of their food, pesticides, and pollution. Bat mortalities are also found at nearly ever wind power facility site worldwide. Though it is estimated that insect-eating bats have saved farmers some billions in pesticide costs, those who continue to use pesticides are killing bats off. When bats eat insects exposed to pesticides, the poison is stored in their body fat. When the body fat is burned during migration (though not all bat species migrate), resins are released into the bloodstream and can cause illness or death. When the bats which eat insects are gone, how will the insects be controlled? Rob Mies answers his own question: Pesticides. A foreign invader has also attacked American bats, and it’s spreading at an alarming rate. White-nose syndrome is a fungus which attacks bats hibernating in cold caves. It is thought that it awakens the host bats before it’s time simply by annoying them, but the result is loss of strength and immunity. When they awaken, it’s still cold and there are no insects to eat so essentially the bats die of starvation. Rob urges people who want to help to buy or construct bat houses (which have very specific design needs). Bat houses will reduce the need for bats to roost in caves where they might contract white- Kamilah, another Malayan Flying Fox. She stayed Michigan this year. Don’t bats have rabies? (No, only about one percent contract rabies – and it kills them. You’re more likely, to the tune of 65,000 cases per year, to get rabies from a dog.) Are they blind? Won’t they get tangled up in your hair? (Bats are not blind. They fly at night and they use echolocation to navigate. They’re afraid of people and will not willingly approach humans. And they don’t build nests so they have no use for your hair.) What about vampire bats? (Yes, there are three species of the more than 1300 species of bat that will lick blood from cows and other animals. They live in Central and South America.) Twenty-five years ago, as a biology student, he met a professor who had bats. He says he found out then how fascinating they are and it has been a lifelong career. Rob says he was excited to be asked to present at the EG Conference, not only for the chance for him and his wife, Ava, to see Monterey and kayak in local waters, but to spread the gospel of bat conservation. Fred arrived via animal air cargo and could care less about kayaking. He will probably be happy to go back home to Michigan. With the plans to raze and then reconstruct the buildings at Portola Plaza, the EG Conference will likely not be in Monterey next year. Interested people can find video of dozens of the talks given over the years at http://www.the-eg.com. It is also available to follow on Facebook and on Twitter. To find out more about the Organization for Bat Conservation, see their web page at http://www.batconservation.org. It’s the one with the bat emoticon. You can watch Rob Mies’ presentation at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K5KYfTWYQic Page 4 • CEDAR STREET Times • May 22, 2015 Upcoming Gentrain Programs The Gentrain Society of Monterey Peninsula College is sponsoring these upcoming free lectures: First Entry Wednesday, June 3 Gentrain Society Lecture: Step into Nature Monterey Peninsula College Lecture Forum 103 1:30 pm - 2:30 pm Free; MPC Parking $2.00 Information: www.gentrain.org ; conductor@gentrain.org Author and poet Patrice Vecchione’s will discuss the relationship between nature and imagination, look at the value of solitude in creativity, and how nature can lead us to important truths. Patrice is the editor of several poetry anthologies for young people and adults, and is the author of “The Knot Untied” and “Writing and the Spiritual Life: Finding Your Voice by Looking Within.” Her latest work “Step into Nature: Nurturing Imagination & Spirit” was greatly inspired by walks in our own Jacks Peak Regional Park. June 17, 2015 at 1:30 pm Gentrain Society Lecture: The Origin of the Monterey Bay Aquarium Monterey Peninsula College Lecture Forum 103 1:30 pm - 2:30 pm Free; MPC Parking $2.00 Information: www.gentrain.org ; conductor@gentrain.org Steven Webster retired in 2004 as Senior Marine Biologist at the Monterey Bay Aquarium. He is the past Chair of the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary Advisory Council. As “employee #1” at the Monterey Bay Aquarium, Steve has seen the realization of the initial idea and the evolution of the Aquarium exhibits and programs during its first 30 years. He’ll discuss how planning and funding got started, how the exhibits program “Habitats Path” originated, and why an exhibit of Monterey Bay’s natural habitats is possible here, and in few other places around the world. Steve will conclude with a look to future exhibits and programs at the Aquarium. Memorial Day Dinner Planned in Marina For the second year, the public is invited to join The Marina Foundation at a Memorial Day dinner to honor those who have served America and who are no longer with us. Proceeds will benefit the Veterans Transition Center to help those veterans who need our help today. The dinner will take place Saturday, May 23 at the American Legion, 694 Legion Way, in Marina. Tickets at $25 may be purchased online at www.themarinafoundation. org, at Veterans Transition Center, from a Marina Foundation board member, or by making a reservation at 831-717-4117 to pay at the door. Music Therapy on Tap at Monterey Library Cathy Rivera, MS, MM, MT-BC, will present a lecture, “Music Therapy – Engaging Your Soundtrack for the Second Half of Life” and demonstration on Monday, June 15, 6:00 - 7:30 p.m., in the Monterey Public Library Community Room. In this lecture Cathy Rivera will discuss Neurological Music Therapy and how applied can promote healthy aging. After enjoying a 22-year career in plant biotechnology and earning a master’s degree in music, Ms. Rivera currently is a Board Certified Music Therapist in Monterey County. This event is part of The Next Chapter: Designing Your Ideal Life lecture series sponsored by the Friends of the Library and the Monterey Public Library Endowment Committee. Adults are invited to attend. Admission is free, and reservations are required. Call (831) 646-5632 or email thongchu@monterey.org. The Monterey Public Library is located at 625 Pacific Street, Monterey. "Foggy Day on the Slough," by Sheila Delimont is one of the first donations for Pacific Grove Art Center’s “Tiny Treasures” annual raffle event. Additional donated miniatures are now being accepted. Donated art must be original work (no reproductions). Any medium is accepted, but each piece must be no larger than 7”x9” including frame, and not to exceed 7” in depth. Each piece must be ready to hang on the wall, with hooks or wires already attached. The Art Center office is staffed to received donations Wednesday through Saturday from noon-5 p.m. and Sunday from 1-4 p.m.Deadline for Donations: June 19, 2015. Gala Opening: Friday, July 3, 2015. Exhibit runs through August 27, 2015 Each miniature will be displayed with a box where patrons will deposit their purchased raffle tickets. At the close of the show one winning ticket will be drawn for each piece of art. STEM Expo Brings Teachers, Science Education Together Corner Sale Donations Sought Teachers meet with Pacific Grove’s Tom Atchison from Mavericks Civilian Space Foundation at the STEM Expo, Saturday May 9, 2015 at the Monterey County While a 3-D printer quietly and methodically built rocket parts, a roomful of Monterey County science teachers got to learn how rocketry, habitat rehabilitation, ocean acidification and rebuilt motors might change the way local students learn science. The 2015 STEM Expo, hosted by the Monterey County Office of Education, gave over 50 local science teachers the opportunity to meet and network with local scientific groups, research organizations and program providers. Exhibitors included the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute, Pacific Grove Museum of Natural History, Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary, LIMPETS Program, Elkhorn Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve, Exploring New Horizons Outdoor School, Save Are you doing some spring cleaning? Be sure to set aside items to be sold at the Whales, Rocket Mavericks, Monterey Bay Aquarium, and Olinga Learning – Intro Pacific Grove’s first annual Corner Sale. The sale is scheduled for Saturday, June to Engineering and Circuits. “This gives teachers in the areas of science, technology, engineering and math 13 from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. on the Bank of America parking lot, 601 Lighthouse Ave., Pacific Grove. All proceeds from the Corner Sale will benefit The Bridge (STEM) the chance to meet face-to-face with representatives from local research and Restoration Ministry, a year-long, Christian-oriented, residential substance scientific groups,” said Brandon Swift, STEM Coordinator with the Monterey County rehabilitation center for men and women. The event is sponsored by Pacific Office of Education. “Teachers can see what programs are available and learn how to Grove Chamber of Commerce and the Bridge Ministry’s Second Chance Thrift tap into the great wealth of expertise that we have right here in Monterey County.” The STEM Expo was presented by the Educational Services Division of the MonStore. Donated items will be accepted before the event and are tax-deductible. All donated items should be in good working order and repair; no stains, tears, terey County Office of Education, and free of charge to Monterey County K-12 science teachers and district administrators. etc. For more information, contact Second Chance at 831-717-4479. May 22, 2015 • CEDAR STREET Arrest Made in False Bomb Incident of February, 2015 After an ongoing investigation involving law enforcement from Arizona as well as the Secret Service and FBI, the Monterey County Sheriff’s Office announced an arrest in the case of the North County High School false bomb report from earlier this year. On Feb. 4, 2015, at approximately 11:42 p.m. the Monterey County Sheriff’s Department experienced the first “wwatting” call by the 17-year-old suspect. He reported a home invasion with a victim shot. Monterey County Sheriff Department responded with an emergency response; approximately 10 units responded along with fire and medical personnel staging. The 17 year old female victim identified the reporting party as another juvenile she had made contact with over the computer. She was able to identify him by his voice which was recorded when he called into the dispatch center. She advised that she had met this subject on line and had developed a “friendship” with him. On Feb. 5, 2015, at approximately 11:38 a.m. and on Feb. 6, 2015 at approximately 11:51 a.m., an emailed bomb threat was sent to North Monterey County High School. The email claimed to be coming from the female victim who was reported to be a member of ISIS. A threat was made that they were going to kill the kids at the school if $15,000.00 was not left at the school’s front gate. The school responded by having approximately 1100 students and all the faculty members evacuated from the school. Every available patrol deputy from all of our stations responded to assist in the evacuation of the school. Several units searched the school as it was reported that there was subject on the school grounds with assault weapons and bombs. Several other agencies in the area also responded to assist the Sheriff’s Department to include the North Monterey County Fire Department and ambulance crews, which staged for emergency medical response. These calls created fear in the community and several students did not return to school for several weeks. North Monterey County High School and the Sheriff’s Department had several meetings with the school staff, the media, and parents trying to ensure the safety of the children at the school. On Feb. 9, 2015 the North Monterey County High School made the decision to close the school for the day to have training and to prepare for further threats to the school and the students. On Feb. 10, 2015 the school was back in session with a minimal number of students present and yet another threat was received through the Monterey County Dispatch Center. The school responded by carrying on the day in a normal fashion. They did have extra security at the school and Sheriff’s patrol conducted extra patrol around the school to ensure the safety of the students and faculty members. The call was analyzed and again it was determined to be the same male juvenile suspect. The female victim in this case as well as her family and other friends received a number of suspicious calls and “swatting” type incidents over the next few weeks. Forensic examinations of the victim’s computer and cellular devices helped investigators track the suspect to a residence in Arizona. With the assistance of the Surprise, AZ, police department and the Secret Service, a search warrant was served at that residence on May 14, 2015. As a result of the search warrant numerous items of evidence were seized and the suspect was interviewed. During the interview the suspect admitted to his actions. It was also discovered that this was not the first time he had committed these types of crimes. The juvenile suspect was subsequently arrested and will be prosecuted. The Monterey County Sheriff’s Office reminds the community of the dangers of meeting people on line. Parents should be aware of predators who are constantly “trolling” the internet in various chat rooms as well as in a number of social media applications in an effort to lure children into compromising situations. The Monterey County Sheriff’s Office suggests that parents frequently check their children’s computers and cellular devices and discuss with them the dangers of giving out personal information or sending pictures of themselves to anyone over any device. Parents should also be aware of their children using their computers and cellular devices to bully and/or prank people, which could result in injuries to include loss of life as seen in some cases. Serious repercussions could result from this type of abuse. Visit the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children’s Website for information on a wide variety of internet, social media and cellular phone security issues. http://www.missingkids.com/home Times • Page 5 Marge Ann Jameson Cop Log Will return. Candidate Seminar for the November 3, 2015 Election The Monterey County Elections Department will host a candidate seminar and invites anyone interested in running for office in the November 3, 2015, “Cities, Schools and Special Districts” election to attend. There are no offices up for election in Pacific Grove. The seminar is scheduled for Saturday, June 13 from 10:00 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. at the Schilling Place Building, 1441 Schilling Place, Salinas. Personnel from Monterey County Elections will provide an overview of: • Requirements for office • Filing procedures • Important deadlines • Campaign finance reporting obligations Attendance is free. To RSVP call 831-796-1499 or email Greta Arevalo at arevalog@co.monterey.ca.us. For more information visit www.MontereyCountyElections.us. Collision and Fire at Apartment Building in Seaside On May 20, 2015 at about 5:50 pm, a vehicle collided into an apartment building in the 1700 block of Flores Street. The vehicle crashed through the corner of the building, knocking out gas lines. Two females were seen running from the vehicle after the collision. The suspected 14-year old driver and other female were quickly apprehended. No injuries were reported at the scene. Before colliding into the building, the driver had struck several parked vehicles on Flores St and Mingo Ave. At about 8:54 pm, while crews were on scene fixing the gas lines, a fire erupted on the other side of the building. Adjacent buildings were evacuated and no injuries were reported. Both the Seaside and Monterey Fire Departments handled the scene. The entire building was left uninhabitable. The exact cause of the fire is still under investigation. The investigation is ongoing. Anyone with information about this incident is encouraged to contact Seaside Police at one of the following numbers: Anonymous Tip-Line – (831) 899-6282 Seaside Police Department – (831) 899-6748 Non-Emergency Dispatch – (831) 394-6811 HIPPOS AND HEROICS The extraordinary saga of my Great-Uncle Fred Art in the service of science Science illustration students exhibit work If you’ve ever wondered about the artwork that illustrates science textbooks, field guides, and interpretive signs in parks and nature preserves, you have the opportunity to learn about it at an exhibit in Pacific Grove. Illustrating Nature, the sixth annual exhibit of work by students in the CSU Monterey Bay Science Illustration Program, will be on display at the Pacific Grove Museum of Natural History May 2 through June 14. The museum is located at 165 Forest Ave., Pacific Grove. The opening reception will be held from 5 to 7 p.m. on May 1. The 66 framed illustrations and several field sketchbooks in the exhibit depict wildlife, flowering plants and extinct creatures including kingfishers, knobbed hornbills, tooth-nosed snout weevils, leafy sea dragons, mountain lions, passion flowers, sundews, and Archaeopteryx and Tyrannasaurus rex, all created using a variety of media including colored pencil, watercolor, gouache, acrylic and digital media. A demonstration of science illustration methods and techniques will be held at the museum from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on May 9. In 2009, the science illustration program relocated from UC Santa Cruz Extension to CSUMB. One of the most prestigious programs of its kind in the nation, it prepares students who are sought after by scientific institutions and publications around the world. Graduates are working at the Smithsonian Institution; New York’s American Museum of Natural History; the Los Angeles Museum of Natural History; the Monterey Bay Aquarium; and National Geographic, Scientific American and Nature magazines. Museum hours are 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Tuesday through Sunday. Admission is free. More information about the PacificGrove Museum of Natural History is available at http://www.pgmuseum.org/ The event is made possible by a grant to the Pacific Grove Museum of Natural History from the Arts Council for Monterey County. The extraordinary saga of Major Frederick Russell Burnham, D.S.O., Howard Burnham’s Californian Great-Uncle Fred for whom he is part-named - Frederick Russell are his other given names besides Howard. Not just idle “ancestor worship.” He was one of the last U.S. Army scouts in General Cook’s Geronimo Apache campaign.Then when the wild west grew too tame, he went to work for Cecil Rhodes in South Africa and for the British army in the Boer War, taught Baden-Powell American Indian scouting techniques, won the Distinguished Service Order, dined with Queen Victoria shortly before she died, befriended Teddy Roosevelt, helped to found the Boy Scouts of America, made a fortune in CA oil…and bizarrely nearly succeeded in introducing the hippopotamus as a US food staple! At The Little House in Jewell Park (Central and Grand) Pacific Grove Saturday, May 30, at 5:30 pm $10 at the door (Sponsored by Pacific Grove Recreation Department) Page 6 • CEDAR STREET Times • May 22, 2015 Jon Guthrie’s High Hats & Parasols 100 Years Ago in Pacific Grove Main line Central Presbyterian Church of Pacific Grove 325 Central Ave. • 831-375-7207 Chabad of Monterey 2707 David Ave. • 831-643-2770 Christian Church Disciples of Christ of Pacific Grove 442 Central Ave. • 831-372-0363 Church of Christ 176 Central Ave. • 831-375-3741 Community Baptist Church Monterey & Pine Avenues • 831-375-4311 First Baptist Church of Pacific Grove 246 Laurel Ave. • 831-373-0741 First Church of God 1023 David Ave. • 831-372-5005 First United Methodist Church of Pacific Grove Worship: Sundays 10:00 a.m. 915 Sunset @ 17-Mile Dr. • 831-372-5875 Forest Hill United Methodist Church Services 9 a.m. Sundays 551 Gibson Ave. • 831-372-7956 Rev. Richard Bowman Jehovah’s Witnesses of Pacific Grove 1100 Sunset Drive • 831-375-2138 Lighthouse Fellowship of Pacific Grove PG Community Center, 515 Junipero Ave. • 831-333-0636 Manjushri Dharma Center 623 Lighthouse Ave. • 831-917-3969 www.khenpokarten.org Mayflower Presbyterian Church 141 14th St. • 831-373-4705 Center for Spiritual Awakening 522 Central Ave. • 831-372-1942 Peninsula Baptist Church 1116 Funston Ave. • 831-394-5712 Peninsula Christian Center 520 Pine Ave. • 831-373-0431 St. Angela Merici Catholic Church 146 8th St. • 831-655-4160 St. Anselm’s Anglican Church Sundays 9:30 a.m. 375 Lighthouse Ave. • 831-920-1620 Fr. Michael Bowhay St. Mary’s-by-the-Sea Episcopal Church Central Avenue & 12 th St. • 831-373-4441 Seventh-Day Adventist Church of the Monterey Peninsula 375 Lighthouse Ave. • 831-372-7818 Shoreline Community Church Sunday Service 10 a.m. Robert Down Elementary, 485 Pine Ave. • 831-655-0100 www.shorelinechurch.org OUTSIDE PACIFIC GROVE Bethlehem Lutheran Church 800 Cass St., Monterey • 831-373-1523 Pastor Bart Rall Auto mobile Accident Dr. E. K. Abhort, of Monterey, was auto mobiling near Pacific Grove, the weekend past, when the good doctor was involved in an accident. Fortunately, no serious consequences are likely except the loss of both involved cars. Dr. Abhort; along with Mr. Campbell, a wealthy Scotchman who is presently a guest at the Hotel Del Monte; accompanied by Mr. Harry Greene and Dr. Little of Monterey in a separate vehicle newly purchased, decided on a joint motoring trip through the Grove and along the Seventeen Miles Drive. Dr. Abhort and Mr. Campbell had made the drive several times previously without mishap. Reaching the scenic coastal area beyond the Grove, the car being driven by Dr. Abhort began drawing ahead and presently lost sight of the vehicle in which rode Mr. Greene and Dr. Little, with Dr. Little behind the wheel. Abhort and Campbell decided to turn around and search for the other auto mobile. This they did. Soon enough, topping a rise, Abhort and Campbell spotted Greene and Little who were stranded mid-road by a flattened tire. Alas, Abhort was unable to apply the brakes adequately to avoid striking the other auto mobile. The two vehicles collided, resulting in a mass of rumpled bumpers and fenders, and the Abhort’s vehicle was thrown upside down. Campbell was tossed clear, but Abhort was caught beneath the coach in such a manner that his trouser leg had to be cut off in order to free him. A passing couple, out for an equestrian ride, happened by. With the assistance of an extra man, two horses, and several ropes, the cars were pulled from the roadway. Otherwise, passage would have been thwarted by the wrecked vehicles. One of the cars had been thrown sideways, completely blocking the road. Both vehicles are considered total losses, and are waiting to be towed as junk. This is the story as related by Mr. Greene. Farm workers oppose eight-hour work day Another rally of farm workers showing continued opposition to the limit of eight hours of work and a five-day work week is scheduled for Sunday afternoon, next. The gathering will occur at the research barn across from Lovers of Jesus Point. Organizers said that the rally is another of several attempts to let the world know the folly of setting an eight-hour work day. Growers are equally adamant. Said one: “The number of hours worked each day is a matter to be determined strictly between worker and boss. The government should not allow itself to become involved. The impact of enforcement may be dire.” But post office workers, it was noted by proponents, have already been reduced to ten hours a day without harmful effects. The editor of the Review wishes it known that the newspaper supports the abstinence of government from matters purely personal. 1 The Flying Dutchman accomplished in moving pictures Wilhelm Wagner’s masterpiece, “The Flying Dutchman,” was performed in moving pictures on Sunday past at Pacific Grove’s Methodist church. The musical drama3 is noted for its rich fabric and instrumentation. Before the showing, Miss Carole Moore, church organist, played several selections on the church pipe organ. The presentation attracted one of the largest audiences ever to assemble in the Grove. Those who missed the filmed enactment missed something that was really worthwhile and will wish to prepare for The Flying Dutchman showing at the Colonial Theater. The film was premiered at the Methodist church courtesy of the Colonial theater. Meeting of museum board The board of director’s for Pacific Grove’s Museum of Natural History met in the museum building on Monday last, in regular session. Miss Ella Deming reported that an income of $175 was realized by the recent flower festival. The largest portion of money resulted from the sale of home-churned ice cream. The money will be put to use in the building fund. Mrs. Beach then noted that a museum visitor from Chicago, Mrs. M. C. Blackman, had added a $10 donation to the fund. For this generous gesture, Mrs. Blackman was given a vote of thanks. A vote of thanks was also given the U. S. Cavalry Band from the Presidio and all other groups providing entertainment or services during the Festival of Flowers. Mrs. F. G. Woodstock then noted that the museum had been given a bale of cotton by the Imperial Valley growers. Mrs. Woodstock said the cotton would soon be on display in the museum foyer. A letter of outstanding membership was then voted to Etta Lloyd. James Carnow, T. A. Van Northden, E. Cooke Smith, C. F. Barker, Tom Cope, A. M. Johnson, W. A. Stillman, John Moore, and R. T. Brady. Side track … Tidbits from here and there • Mr. and Mrs. T. Schuler with Mrs. W. H. Hughley and daughter have returned to the Grove after auto mobiling to and around San Francisco. • Mr. W. T. Grimes has returned from Los Angeles where he attended the annual conference of the Grand Army of the Republic. • Mr. Duncan Stirling, superintendent of schools and wife are in the Grove for a holiday.2 • Miss Elizabeth Kroger, teacher of home economics, has agreed to provide instruction in meal preparation and in foods preservation at this summer’s Chautauqua. And the cost is … • Be prepared to battle the summer itch by purchasing a supply of Rexall’s Anti-itch Cream now. On sale at your local drug store for 35¢ a jar. Author’s notes … 1 It should be remembered that the Review’s principal source of income was advertising purchased by employers. Workers probably were not as opposed to an eight-hour day as the newspaper represented. 2 Surely a missing comma. Mr. Stirling was most likely not the wife’s superintendent. 3 Wagner’s operas were so forceful they were termed musical dramas. Congregation Beth Israel 5716 Carmel Valley Rd., Carmel • 831-624-2015 Monterey Church of Religious Science Sunday Service 10:30 am 400 West Franklin St., Monterey • 831-372-7326 www.montereycsl.org Saltwater Intrusion on our Coast Extensive groundwater extraction has led to saltwater intrusion into aquifers at various locations along the Monterey coast. To date, mapping of saltwater intrusion has relied on measurements in wells that only provide data for single locations. Come learn about a new approach to imaging saltwater intrusion over a 25 mile stretch Monterey’s beaches to a depth of 1000 ft. Tuesday, May 26, 7:30 pm at Hopkins Marine Reserve, Boat Works Lecture Hall 120 Ocean View Blvd, Pacific Grove. Call 655-6200 for reservations. May 22, 2015 • CEDAR STREET American Cancer Society’s annual 24-hour fundraising walk includes teams of people who camp out around a track. Members of each team take turns walking around the track all day and night to raise funds for cancer research. During the Survivors Lap, all cancer survivors at the event take the first lap around the track, celebrating their victory over cancer, cheered on by the other participants who line the track. The Luminaria Ceremony takes place after dark, so we can remember people we have lost to cancer, honor people who have fought cancer in the past, and support those whose fight continues. Candles are lit inside of personalized bags and are placed around the Relay track as glowing tributes to those who’ve been affected by cancer. Memorial Day Observance at Mission Memorial Park “Annual Memorial Day Patriotic Remembrance” at Mission Memorial Park on May 25 is a chance for us to h0onor our local veterans who have passed away. - co-hosted by American Legion Post 591. Memorial Day is a day of remembrance. To Mission Memorial Park and Seaside Funeral Home, celebrating and honoring the lives of those who have passed has always been our purpose. Therefore, Monday, May 25 is of great importance to us and that is why we along with the American Legion Post 591 are hosting a celebration. The American Legion will officiate the service. The families of all local veterans who passed away since Memorial Day 2014 will be presented with a certificate from President Obama for their service. We have arranged for the fire and police department, Seaside High ROTC and Color Guard, city staff and the mayor to be present. This year we are dedicating the new Wall of Honor at Mission Memorial Park which is a section of our mausoleum dedicated to veterans and memorialized by a large seal for every branch of the U.S. military. We are continuing our retired flag program along with the Boy Scouts of America, where we collect tattered flags and bury them in a designated grave to give them a dignified disposal. We are rolling out the new memorial restoration program to bring weathered veterans' markers back to their former glory. All veterans' graves will be marked with a white cross and an American flag which is a beautiful tribute. Hot dogs and a free raffle will finish out our day. We invite you to join us for our Annual Memorial Day Patriotic Remembrance. Mission Memorial Park and Seaside Funeral Home is located at 1915 Ord Grove Ave. in Seaside. Call 831-394-1481if you have questions. w No Monterey event totals:Total funds raised: $34,095.72 Number of teams: 20 Number of cancer survivors that participated: 43 Number of participants: 281 The "Marine Corps Detachment POM" team of 14 people finished a total of 192.3 miles, having one member walking or running on the track the entire time (only stopping for our Luminaria remembrance ceremony) -- for a total of 675 laps around the track One member of team "Charlie Cobras" walked the full 24 hours for a total of 60 miles "Don't Stop Believing" team member Jen Dawalt was our #2 top individual fundraiser ($1,080) and walked 40 miles and recorded taking 98,003 steps Maureen’s Pacific Grove Homes for Sale 1387 Jewell Ave. Ocean View Beach Cottage $1,395,000 2 bed 2 ba On large Asilomar view lot. New listing and pending sale PEN G DIN E SAL 289 Lighthouse Ave. $1,989,000 3 bed 3ba The Boulders offers panoramic bay views from main house and good bay views from guest house. ! en Op Times • Page 7 Chalice Closet Benefit Shop 120 Carmel Ave. • Pacific Grove Monday & Friday • 11–3 Offering Quality Merchandise at Affordable Prices! Operated by the Christian Church of Pacific Grove Maureen Mason COLDWELL BANKER Del Monte Realty BRE#00977430 650 Lighthouse Ave.Ste.110 Pacific Grove, CA 93950 Cell (831) 901-5575 Direct (831) 622-2565 walkpacificgrove.com Maureen@maureenmason.com Page 8 • CEDAR STREET Times • May 22, 2015 Monterey’s Almost-Million-Dollar Question: To grind or not to grind up asphalt? To grind or not to grind up asphalt? That fork in the road confronted Monterey City Council at its meeting on May 5, at which time the issue was tabled until May 19. The two weeks served as a Help Needed campaign, message of which was: “The City of Monterey is in a quandary. Affordable housing for low-income families and homeless people is needed desperately, but help is also needed to manage such projects.” The city, in a time-constrained “use it or lose it” position, has nearly $1 million ($962,407) available in federal HUD (the U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development) Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) funds. If usage is not okayed by June 30, the funds will be withdrawn. Pieces of the Money Pie While $1 million represents a vast sum of money to a transient man who sleeps in a tent or sleeping bag, or homeless woman who lives in her car, it can be a relatively insignificant amount for institutions and organizations responsible for housing, temporarily sheltering, and otherwise feeding and caring for the large numbers of needy persons in an area like the Monterey Peninsula, where property costs continue to soar despite downturns in the economy. According to Carl Braginsky, HR/Grant Specialist with the Salvation Army Monterey Peninsula Corps, “The Salvation Army has been aware for weeks of this funding amount and the city’s interesting dilemma in having a $900 K purse of Wanda Sue Parrott Homeless in Paradise unspent funds. There have been communications between Rick Marvin of the city’s housing office and The Salvation Army on at least a couple of occasions. This purse of $900 K cannot be spent on ‘services’ but must be spent, by my understanding, on capital improvements/purchases, targeted neighborhood upgrades and the like, according to HUD regulations. “Our response to Mr. Marvin was that the Salvation Army is not now in a position to increase our current housing inventory, so we would not be able to help develop a new housing option in either Seaside or Monterey, particularly on such short notice. The fact of the matter also is that $900 K is not enough money to support a meaningful property purchase, let alone sustain an on-going budget to manage services for the homeless. . . . “I might suggest that the penin- Care Management & Fiduciary Services Jacquie DePetris, LCSW, CCM, LPF • Licensed Professional Fiduciary • Certified Care Manager • Conservatorships • Special Needs Trusts • Health Care Agent • Professional Organizing www.ElderFocus.com 2100 Garden Road, Suite C • Monterey jkd@ElderFocus.com Ph: 831-643-2457 • Fax: 831-643-2094 sula cities do a better job of coordinating their funding and efforts towards regional planning for services to our homeless neighbors. . . . If the $900 K were leveraged with other funds/assets from other sources/localities, to be used for developing permanent supportive housing for the homeless, that would appear to me to have been a more meaningful way to use the money. carl.braginsky@usw.salvationarmy.org Following the May 5 meeting, the community-at-large accessed the basic message (paraphrased below) from media reports and broadcasts of the city council meeting on Channel 25. Help! City seeks Partner “A partner with social-service expertise is needed by the city to help spend the money. There isn’t much time!” the message said. “Are you interested in partnering with the city? If the June 30 deadline passes and the city loses the funds, approximately only $180,000 will be made available in federal funding starting next year. “Since these block-grant funds must be used specifically for development of and improvements to low-income/affordable housing and other social programs addressed toward helping the needy, a cap exists on how the funds can be spent. “If no viable alternative is presented by May 19, the money that could go a long way toward helping get homeless people, especially elderly women, off the streets, will be approved for grinding up asphalt on the streets and HUD will, thus, enable the city to keep the funding so desperately needed by those now spending their nights in cars or sleeping bags.” Public protests and comments from council members at the May 5 meeting resulted in tabling the item until May 19. Outside city limits is okay The City of Monterey can use the funds outside the city limits, as long as Monterey residents will be beneficiaries. Carl Braginsky says of the Salvation Army in Seaside, “We are pleased to receive from the City of Monterey about $25 K per year, given to help Monterey residents with rental assistance, in order to prevent homelessness.” Under consideration at the May 5 meeting was one 8-unit building in Seaside. Anyone aware of a commercial property such as a motel or room-andboard, bed-and-breakfast or apartment building facing tax delinquency and/ or other for-sale conditions, and located within the definition of “Monterey Peninsula” boundaries was encouraged to contact Monterey City Manager Michael McCarthy at 831-646-3760, mccarthy@ monterey.org or council member Timothy Barrett at 831-277-9505, digistream@ live.com. The implicit message ended: “Have you ever tried to sleep on asphalt, intact or ground up? It ain’t comfortable! If you can help resolve this quandary, speak up. Pronto! If you wait until the May 19 council meeting, you might be too late.” The Ultimate Answer So, what happened on May 19? To grind or not grind up ashphalt? Rick Marvin presented a revised proposal to the nearly million-dollar question and Monterey City Council approved it 4 to 1. In lieu of grinding up asphalt and making other infrastructure repairs to low-income neighborhoods, $62,500 of the CDBG money will repair and improve Community Housing Services, 599 Pearl St., Monterey, a non-profit agency that has served homeless/runaway youth for the past 20 years; $450,000 will go toward rehabilitating units in Marina to become transitional housing for veterans and veterans’ families; $95,000 will purchase deed-restricted ownership units. Announcement was made that a 4-unit property had become available in Seaside. Reyes Bonilla, director of Shelter Outreach Plus, stated his non-profit is ready, willing and able to partner with Monterey, to which councilmember Timothy Barrett said: “Metaphorically speaking, the doors have swung open and people have walked through to engage with the city.” Also, metaphorically speaking, we think Monterey took the right fork in the road. Contact Wanda Sue Parrott at 831899-5887 or amykitchenerfdn@hotmail. com Important Auction|May 30-31st 5644 Telegraph Ave. Oakland, California 510-428-0100 info@clars.com Clars Auction Gallery is proud to feature fine examples of Period 18th & 19th Century antiques from the legendary Trotter’s Antiques, Pacific Grove, CA visit us online at www.clars.com Diamond and platinum wedding ring set, engagement ring highlighting a round brilliant cut diamond weighing approximately 5.30 cts. (band not shown) Art Nouveau cameo glass vases by Gallé and Daum Nancy Fine selection of Continental porcelain including Royal Vienna, Sevres, Meissen, featuring 19th century examples Baccarat hand painted and ormolu mounted centerpiece, dated 1868, and retains original B. Nathan Co. SF retailer’s label School of Bartolomé Murillo (Spanish, 1618-1682), “The Gypsy Madonna,” oil on canvas, 63” x 42” Fine selection of period lighting including Pairpoint, Wilkinson, and Chicago Mosaic Gilt bronze mounted Baccarat centerpiece American antique sterling silver repousse five piece hot beverage suite in the "Castle" pattern by Baltimore Silversmiths Manufacturing Company, 1903-1905, 91.91 troy oz. Chinese coral carving of beauties, late Qing/ Republic period, 8”h May 22, 2015 • CEDAR STREET Dr. Mossberg, Poet Emeritus, will read Dr. Barbara Mossberg will read from her book Sometimes the Woman in the Mirror Isn’t You, and Other Hopeful Breaking News on Saturday, June 6 from 3-5 p.m. at the Little House at Jewell Park in Pacific Grove. With this book, Dr. Mossberg’s poetry celebrates life with a self-conscious snapshot of a woman’s life through thoughtprovoking accounts of such everyday events as how a spider’s life is spared, daybreak coming to Pacific Grove, how a pine tree is seen, and a Zumba class that goes downhill fast. But all is hopeful news in this new book. Longtime professor and our own former Pacific Grove Poet in Residence, Dr. Barbara Mossberg is an award-winning poet, scholar, teacher, Fulbright Lecturer, Huffington Post arts commentator, and radio host of weekly hour “The Poetry Slow Down” (radiomonterey.com, podcast BarbaraMossberg.com). According to Dr. Mossberg, “In my case, the fact that the environment, however stressed and stressing, generates poetry, is a magnetic source of gratitude of the poet: a consciousness of poetry as a kind of deus ex machina in the quotidian environment as experienced by someone determined to invoke its possibilities for an epic moxie--a glam strutting of the poetic gear in the face of gravity and other geological challenges of an old lady earthly life, all that weighs us down. Catastrophes stir an ecopoetics of the spirit, but the natural issues of life are seen here in poems that seek lift and buoyancy in the process of the poem itself.” Lemon pie will be served. Memorial Day Ceremony with American Legion Post and the City of Carmel Times • Page 9 Diving deep and long while not breathing How air breathing marine mammals can hold their breaths for long, deep dives while hunting for food will be the subject of the program at the Monterey Bay Chapter of the American Cetacean Society on Thursday, May 28. Dr. Birgitte McDonald, assistant professor of vertebrate ecology at Moss Landing Marine Labs, will discuss her recent research with California sea lions and harbor porpoises. She uses bio-loggers attached to the animals to study their ability to regulate their heart rate in dives and underwater actions. Understanding the physiological mechanisms will help predict how the marine mammals will respond to changing food supplies, Dr. McDonald has explained. She started working in Moss Landing after researching harbor porpoises in Denmark as a National Science Foundation International Research Fellow. Before that Dr. McDonald did post-doctoral research at Scripps Institution of Oceanography in San Diego, studying oxygen management in sea lion foraging dives. The program is free and open to the public. It is scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m. in the Boat Works building at Hopkins Marine Station, 120 Ocean View Blvd., Pacific Grove. More information can be found on the cetacean society’s Web site at www.acsmb.org. MEMORIAL DAY SALE! May 23, 24, & 25 American Legion Post 512 in conjunction with the City of Carmel-by-the-Sea invites the public to join them on Monday, May 25, 2015, to commemorate Memorial Day. The ringing of the WWI Memorial Bell located at Ocean and San Carlos will commence at 11 a.m., with the actual ceremony being held in Devendorf Park, located on Ocean and Junipero, with remarks by various local dignitaries. The Color Guard is from the Monterey High Junior Navy ROTC Cadets program. Following the ceremony an open house will be held at the American Legion Post 512, located on Dolores between 8th and 9th avenues. Did you do something notable? Have your Peeps email our Peeps editor@cedarstreettimes.com Storewide Savings on sofas, cocktail tables, beds, chairs, recliners, accessories and more! 246 Forest Ave. Pacific Grove • 831.372.6250 www.mumsfurniture.com M-Sat. 10-5:30, Sun. Noon-5 Financing & Layaway Available Taft & Teak Hardwood Furniture & Home Décor 581 Lighthouse Avenue, Pacific Grove, 831 373 3801 Open Sun 10-5, Mon-Sat 10-5:30, www.taftandteak.com Ragamuffin Musical Theater SUMMER DAY CAMP JUNE 15 – JULY 12 Memorial Day Sale DIVINE ▪ DINING ▪ SALE NOW UNTIL THE END OF MAY DINING TABLES ▪ BUFFETS ▪ DINNERWARE SERVEWARE ▪ TABLE LINENS LOVE▪LIVING▪LUSCIOUSLY MONDAYS - FRIDAYS 9:00AM – 5:00PM PERFORMANCES ON JULY 11 AND 12 - MORNING & EVENING EXTENDED DAY CAMP HOURS ARE AVAILABLE - Ages 8-17 Years For theater novices, veterans, and the “just curious” PACIFIC GROVE MIDDLE SCHOOL $50 GYMNASIUM AND PERFORMING ARTS CENTER 835 FOREST AVENUE FOUR-WEEK DAY CAMP: $850. TUITION IS $850. EARLY-ENROLLMENT DISCOUNT • DEADLINE IS JUNE 1 PAYMENT PLAN, SIBLING & RETURNING CAMPER DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE SEE WEBSITE FOR REGISTRATION & INFO: www.difrancodance.com Page 10 • CEDAR STREET Times • May 22, 2015 Music and More will be Theme for Summer Reading Progam Tiny treasures sought for fundraiser The Pacific Grove Art Center is seeking donated art work for the Tiny Treasurers 2015 Miniatures Show, an annual fundraiser which generates income to sustain the The Monterey Public Library will kick off its annual Summer Reading Program nonprofit Art Center. The miniatures will be exhibited July 3 through August 27. on Saturday, June 6, 1 - 5 p.m. This year’s theme is “Read to the Rhythm”, and the Artists are asked to donate a gallery-worthy work of art before June 19. The dokick-off event will include sign-ups, snacks, and special performances by the Monterey nated art must be original work (no reproductions) and must be no larger than 7”x 9” Ukelele Club and Bollyworld Dancers. All ages are welcome. including frame, and not to exceed 7” in depth. Any medium is accepted. Each piece Throughout the summer, activities at the Library and Bookmobile will feature must be ready to hang on the wall, with hooks or wires already attached. dance, music, poetry, and reading fun. Children can earn prizes for time spent reading. The Art Center office is staffed to receive donations at 568 Lighthouse Ave., Pacific And there will be special activities for all ages. The program runs through July 30. Grove, during normal open hours of Wednesday through Saturday from noon-5 p.m. The Library is located at 625 Pacfiic Street, Monterey. For more information call and Sunday from 1-4 p.m. (831) 646-3933 or see details at www.monterey.org/library. Every miniature will be displayed with a voting box where patrons may deposit their purchased raffle tickets. At the close of the show, one winning ticket will be drawn for each piece of art. Step Back in Time Monterey History & Art Association’s La Merienda Monterey’s 245th Birthday & MHAA’s 84th Anniversary Saturday, June 6 Festivities 11:15am • Memory Gardens/Custom House Plaza BBQ Luncheon & Entertainment by Mike Marotta, Jr., Mariachis & Folklorico Dancers Dress: Early California Attire MHAA Member: $55 / Non-Member: $75 Tickets/Info: Carol Todd (831) 372-4445 www.montereyhistory.org Photos of harbor seal pups in gallery showing opens May 13 Pacific Grove photographers Kim M. Worrell and Peter Monteforte have pooled their pictures of harbor seal pups born on Pacific Grove beaches this spring to present a show, “The Harbor Seals of Monterey Bay.” The first showing will be at Ma’s Green Living, 801 Lighthouse Ave., in Monterey, with an opening reception with the artists from 5 to 7:30 p.m. Friday, May 15. Both photographers have taken photos of harbor seals that utilize the beaches and rocks along the Pacific Grove shoreline for several years, and some of those will be included. They also both photograph other wildlife and memorable scenes in the area. This is the first time they have teamed up for a showing, and maybe the first time the newest seal pups have ever been featured in a single display. Kim M. Worrell also supplies many photographs and videos for the popular Facebook page “Harbor Seals of Pacific Grove.” Some of her pictures, as well as Peter Monteforte’s pictures, have been seen in previous editions of the Cedar Street Times. Programs at the PG Library For more information call 648-5760 Wednesday, May 27 • 11:00 am Pre-School stories, ages 2-5. Wednesday, May 27 • 3:45 pm “Wacky Wednesday” after-school program presents Beach Picnic: stories, science and crafts for all ages. Thursday, May 28 • 11:00 am Baby time: Rhymes, stories and songs for babies ages birth-24 months. Thursday, May 28 Tales to Tails: Children can read out loud to certified therapy dogs in the children’s area of the Pacific Grove Library. Starting Monday, June 1 Sign up for the Summer Reading Program at the Pacific Grove Library, 550 Central Avenue, Pacific Grove 93950. Read all summer long, earn prizes, and come to the special events every week. For more information call 648-5760. Poetry In The Grove Presents A reading and book signing with Dr. Barbara Mossberg on Saturday, June 6, 2015, from 3-5 pm at the Little House in Jewell Park. Renowned Poet, Author, Fulbright Scholar, Professor and Host of the weekly Poetry Slow Down radio show, our own former PG Poet in Residence, Dr. Mossberg, will read from her book of poetry, Sometimes the Woman in the Mirror is Not You and Other Hopeful News Postings. Join us for what promises to be an entertaining afternoon of poetry, tom foolery and lemon pie eating. Poetry In The Grove meets from 3:00-5:00 pm on the first Saturday of each month at the Little House in Jewell Park, 578 Central Ave, Pacific Grove. A different poet is discussed each month. Cosponsored by the Pacific Grove Poetry Collective, and the Pacific Grove Public Library. www.facebook.com/PacificGrovePoetryCollective This event is offered at no cost, donations for the PG Public Library gratefully accepted. May 22, 2015 • CEDAR STREET A Jury of One’s Peers Tom Stevens Otter Views The Monterey County Court’s jury assembly room in Salinas seats about 200, with space along the walls for standees. Two walls and most of the chairs were full by 8:30 one recent Monday morning, when 180 of us passed through metal detectors and reported for the first shift. “One hundred eighty more will be coming in here at 10:30,” a clerk announced, “followed by another 180 at 1 o’clock. So we need to move you through in a timely manner. We’ll call the first 75 numbers in about 45 minutes. Until then, please help yourselves to coffee and pastry.” A general stirring rippled through the room as prospective jurors rose to make phone calls or to browse tables proffering a dozen kinds of pastries and Starbucks coffee from industrial-size dispensers. “I could get used to this,” I thought, but then I saw the banner. “Juror Appreciation Week 2015,” it read. Thanks to some wrinkle in the space-time continuum, our jury notices had brought us into the room on the very week California honors its jurors. And it was that week only. As I lifted onto my plate an iced caramel donut glittering with candy sprinkles, my pulse quickened. If I could get onto one of the juries, there would be coffee and pastries every morning all week. But as I would soon discover, getting onto a jury is not so easy. First, there’s the terminology. As if to prepare us for what lay ahead, the coffee tables offered stacks of violet-colored flyers titled: “Juror Appreciation Week Word Search Puzzle.” Hidden within a word square matrix were 28 legal terms ranging from “foreperson” to “judicial branch.” All were in English, except the French “voir dire.” Circling the answers, I was struck by all the special words the law uses and expects citizens to know. And the violet sheet was just an appetizer. When we reached the actual court room, the words would get longer and the meanings more complicated. At 9:45, the clerks faced the assembly room and called out the first 75 names who would receive number stickers and report to a courtroom. I was issued number 39. Filing silently into the court room, we filled the place up. I remember thinking 75 seemed a wildly inflated number of prospects for a 12-person jury, even including the six alternates. After explaining that questioning would continue until the 12 and six had been chosen, the judge added some advice. “Please don’t think just because you have a high number you won’t be in that chair answering those questions,” he said. “I can’t tell you how many times juror 75 sat in that first seat, or juror 104, or juror 140.” Gazing down at the #39 sticker affixed to my shirt pocket, I thought: “Coffee and sprinkle donuts, here I come!” But first, the judge and the two attorneys would have to reject at least 21 others before selecting me. Pastry-wise, the situation looked dire. But as the “voir dire” (to see, to say) questioning got underway, the judge’s admonition was borne out: jury prospects exited the box faster than chocolate eclairs. The judge excused on hardship grounds any who would face “extreme financial burdens” if the trial lasted two weeks or longer. Also excused were sole supporters of children or elders; full-time students; and those with limited English. Once the judge had exercised his veto powers, the attorneys for the state and the defense each had 10 “preemptory” dismissals they could invoke. These generally involved jurors who knew someone in crime, corrections or law enforcement, or whose answers suggested possible biases. The attorneys also could “stipulate” that poor English skills could eliminate a prospect. While numbers 1 through 38 were being questioned, I had time to reflect on the language issue. The Constitution grants trial by a jury of one’s peers. But what if English is a daunting second language for the defendant’s presumable peers? If jurors need to understand the terms used by highly educated judges and attorneys, can a jury of peers truly be assembled? Or will it be, by default, a jury of the court’s peers? To that end, I scribbled down some of the words and phrases I heard that Monday. They include: “evaluate credibility,” “relevant,” “admonition to self-sequester,” “impartially,” “telephonically,” “fascinating,” “whatsoever,” “marital privilege,” “abiding conviction,” “appearance of impropriety,” “philosophical objections,” “without reservation,” “third person,” and of course, “voir dire” and “stipulation.” One by one, prospective jurors fell like sheaves before the scythe, and I realized 39 was not such an unlikely number. At length it was called, and my sprinkle donut jones went into overdrive. “I understand every word you’re saying,” I told the judge excitedly. “I used to be a journalist.” “Dismissed!” Times • Page 11 Jane Roland Animal Tales and Other Random Thoughts The rest of the story “A rolling stone gathers no moss.” That is quite true. It cannot, however, be said about literature or stories. Some weeks ago I wrote about the Flavins and in following columns followed up with tales about our cat Joe. I covered the night he joined our family and how, some years later, he moved away. I received a letter from David Clemens with whom Joe spent his last years. David filled me in on the last years of our wandering feline which I wrote about in a recent column. This week my daughter in law, Denise, Jay’s wife, sent me the following: “In 1994 we had a cat named Roxy and a dog named Jazz (the best dog and cat that there ever could be!). Then came a kitten named Biz. When we took her for her last set of kitten shots she was also going to get fixed. When she was picked up we were told that she had a bladder infection and that the operation was not done .We were given medication and told to come back in a couple weeks. In our crazy busy lives with two young boys and jobs, that information went in and out of my head... kitten program done was checked off in my brain. A year later I woke to my son Justin yelling from the top bunk of his bed, “RATS”! I was horrified and made my husband go first to investigate. To my delight and surprise it was not rats but kittens born in his bed. They were fun but I knew we could not keep them. The picture of the black kitten in the drawer with the 49ers shirt is Joe Montana. So that is how Justin took a kitten to Nana. But the story continues... While Joe was having his drama on the other side of town, we too decided to get another dog. Jazz was no longer allowed to go to work with me and I feared he would be lonely. So we got a 6 week black lab pup named Sadie. A bouncy noisy ball of energy. She of course loved to chase the cats. Roxy let her know that she was in charge right away with no problem but Biz (Joe’s mother) moved next door. I went over daily and got her and gave her special attention and tried to help them be friends but she would not stay here unless trapped. This went on for about a month and then Biz just left for good. We could never find her again. She was microchipped and had a collar. We put up signs and asked neighbors.So perhaps Joe’s behavior was genetic. I hope Biz lived a happy life somewhere; I guess I’ll never know.” I have been asked how Lilah, our Dorgi, (Queen Elizabeth’s name for her dachshund-corgi mix and what’s good enough for her is fine with us) is doing. If you recall, she lost her “sister” Brandy a couple of months ago. At first she was confused. I am not so sure she missed her companion, as Lilah has always been somewhat self-involved. She was, however, lonely and seemed sad. She started scratching at the family room door at night. In fact she chewed the paint and wood off on the side. Obviously this would not work so we invited her to share our bed. “Why,” some have asked, “don’t you have a nice bed on the floor for her?” They don’t know our pup. There is no way she would be satisfied on the floor. This has been an interesting project on many levels. For a relatively small but heavy dog she manages to take three quarters of a king-size bed and, frequently, either John or I find our feet hanging off the side with no covers. She is starting to join one or both of us at work and behaves in a very mannerly fashion. I have no idea if we will get another dog. Lilah is a good little gal and she has her best friend, Toby. This is one of the drawbacks of getting older, our pets might outlive us. If it is meant to be, it will happen, someone looking for a home will find us. They always do. Lilah and Toby When I was a younger person and my mother was still living, I was very amused because she was obsessed by television. The Brady Bunch and Robert Conrad and Ross Martin (The Wild, Wild West). They were her family, her companions. Now I understand. John and I watch a great many programs, almost every night. I find myself discussing episodes with friends and see a few eyes rolling, unless, of course, they have the same interest. That’s what happens with age. We read or we watch the “tube”. Our friends are thinning out, our social lives disappear for the most part and entertainment fills the void created by passing years. So, enjoy your secret vices, cheer the winner of American Idol, or not. Wallow in the escapades of those on Mad Men or Nashville. Wince at the perfidy of Mr. Selfridge’s lady friend. Deplore the fact that Danny always solves the crimes on Blue Bloods. Know that you are not alone, and don’t be embarrassed to admit that you watch commercial TV as well as PBS...Just be glad that it is there and that you are not alone Jane Roland manages the AFRP Treasure Shop in Pacific Grove, is a PG Rotarian and lives in Monterey with John, Lilah, Toby and Sammy. Gcr770@aol.com Summer Camp at PG Art Center Keep the kids busy this summer by registering them for one of the many youth arts classes being offered at Pacific Grove Art Center. Let them make comic books, stop-motion films, draw and paint animals, and much more. Register with the Art Center during regular hours, or call (831) 375-2208 or email at: generalinfopgac@gmail.com. There are many focused sessions beginning in June. For details, look online at: http://www.pgartcenter.org/classesSummerCamps.html. The nonprofit Pacific Grove Art Center at 568 Lighthouse Ave, Pacific Grove, is always free and open to the public. Regular hours are from noon to 5 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday, and from 1-4 p.m. on Sundays. Page 12 • CEDAR STREET Times • May 22, 2015 Dealing with Family Secrets Not to be underestimated Joyce Krieg Keepers of our Culture Writers of memoir, autobiography and family history often face great angst when it comes to deciding what to include and what to leave out—especially when it comes to family secrets and other information that might be embarrassing or damaging to another person. While it can be thrilling to dive into Ancestry.com and discover a far-distant relative who was a notorious stagecoach robber, it’s quite another thing to write about a still-living brother who did time in prison, or a daughter’s messy divorce. This is a question that has no “one size fits all” answer. One place to start, though, is to ask yourself why you are writing your life story. Common reasons include contributing to the historic record, leaving a legacy for family and friends, discovering more about yourself and the times you’ve lived in, setting the record straight and “having my say,” and writing as therapy, processing painful memories and moving on. Your motivation for writing may help determine how many secrets you want to divulge and how deep you must delve into difficult or painful memories. Another important consideration is your intended audience. Those who are planning to donate their family histories to a museum or university archive may feel a greater need for accuracy and completeness than writers whose intent is to create a unique and meaningful gift for their grandchildren. If you’re planning to publish your memoir and put it up for sale in bookstores and on Amazon, you have a far greater need to consider the impact on the people mentioned in your book versus the writer who plans to lock up his manuscript in a safe deposit box for all eternity. Writing for publication—even if it’s just a few dozen copies passed out to friends—can raise a host of legal issues. Even if your facts are accurate and you have documents to back them up, the courts have generally held that the average citizen—in other words, not a politician, a celebrity or a Kardashian—has the right to privacy, especially when it comes to information that could be embarrassing or damaging if it were generally known. Tread cautiously when divulging financial data, medical records, the contents of letters or emails, or the sexual behavior of a living person. Ways to Keep from Censoring Your Story That doesn’t mean you must stifle yourself, hide the difficult or shameful parts of your story, or sugar coat the facts. One obvious solution, of course, is to obtain written permission from everyone mentioned in your book. But often that isn’t possible, especially when it comes to tracking down people from your distant past. One popular solution used by many best-selling memoir writers is to change the names and other identifying characteristics, like age and appearance, of the “cast” who either cannot be located or who refuse to give permission to be included. Depending on the tone of your book, this can be done with comic effect, so that Sister Agatha, your mean sixth grade teacher, becomes Sister Agony. If you have a reasonably good relationship with the major characters in your memoir, you could ask them to read it while it’s still in the manuscript stage and add their reaction or interpretation of the events being described. You may find Baby Richard grows up to be the black sheep in someone's family. Shhhhh! it surprising and insightful to discover, for example, that a sibling has a radically different take on an incident that you both experienced or witnessed. But what about those who had a truly horrifying past, who endured the unspeakable and unforgiveable? In this case, the best option may be to tell the story in a fictionalized, novel format rather than as a fact-based memoir or autobiography. Pat Conroy famously did this with “The Great Santini,” a novel based on his struggles growing up in a military family with a physically and emotionally abusive father. Even as fiction, the book stirred up trouble to the point where family members would picket his book signings. Eventually, though, Conroy reconciled with his father and they became quite close. Still another option is to write two versions of your memoir, one for the public with the difficult material left out or glossed over, and the other just for yourself, “letting it all hang out.” Deciding Which Path Feels “Right” Communities for Sustainable Monterey County held their 10th Anniversary luncheon on Sat., May 16 and celebrated, in the words of chairwoman Denyse Frischmuth, “passionate volunteers who can move mountains.” The 100 percent volunteer communities include eight local action groups: Sustainable Seaside, Sustainable Carmel Valley, Hourbank Monterey County, Citizens for Sustainable Marina, Sustainable Salinas, Monterey green Action, Big Sur Advocates for a Green Environment, Sustainable Pacific Grove, Sustainable Carmel, and community gardens including Monterey and Pacific Grove. Gary Patton, one of the original executives of Landwatch, was the keynote speaker. As chairwoman Denyse Frischmuth enumerated the amazing accomplishments of the groups over the past 10 years, she warned, “Do not underestimate the effort it takes to start a group!” Singled out for special honors for everything from web design to gathering signatures to holding workshops were (Left to right on the front row:) Leonard Levenson, Vicki Pearse, Lynda Sayre, Layne Long, Nicole Chrislock (for Francesca Garibaldi), Denyse Frischmuth, Jean Donnelly, Allen Tegtmeier Back row: Safwat Malek, Bill Weigle, Luana Conley, Karin Locke, Leticia Hernandez (for Matthew Spiegl), Nancy Bennett. For more information start at Communities for Sustainable Monterey County. org Children with Disabilities Benefit from Elks’ Contributions More than $17,523 was contributed during the past year by members of Monterey Elks Lodge 1285, to be used in treating children with disabilities, according to Les Field, the Lodge Exalted Ruler. All of the funds are devoted solely to providing vision screening and therapy treatment to children with a broad range of disabilities and is one of the many philanthropic and patriotic projects which mark the Elks’ contribution to the community each year. More than $3,251,000.00 was contributed last year by members of Elks Lodges throughout California and Hawaii. Trikes for Tots As we mentioned earlier, there are no simple answers when it comes to deciding what to include and what to leave out in your memoir, but giving some thought to a few questions may provide guidance: Which option does the most good and the least harm? What is the best way to present the material while still preserving the dignity and privacy of the people in my story? Which choice will bring justice and closure, both to me and the characters in my book? What path simply feels “right” based on my own values and ethics? Anne Lamott is a best-selling memoirist known for her wit and humor, at once gentle and snarky. Her advice: “You own everything that happened to you. Tell your stories. If people wanted you to write warmly about them, they should’ve behaved better.” Joyce Krieg and Patricia Hamilton are personal historians and facilitators for the Guided Autobiography classes at the Masonic Lodge. For more information and to get started on writing your stories: 831649-6640, publishingbiz@sbcglobal.net Lindsay Munoz, president of the Pacific Grove Rotary Club and representing the Rotary Legacy Fund, presents Forest Grove Elementary School kindergarten teacher Summer Wright with a $1,300 check to buy new tricycles for the kindergarten students. The Rotary Legacy Fund contributes to projects that make an impact in Pacific Grove. Last year the Legacy Fund gave $4,500 for improvements to the sound system at the Pacific Grove Performing Arts Center. May 22, 2015 • CEDAR STREET PSEWER From Page 1 a good result. The pump station and equipment is 25 years old, but is maintained on a regular schedule. The PCA and other agencies will be looking into installing a redundancy to prevent a recurrence. The cost at this juncture is unknown, says Sciuto, and he acknowledges that fines are possible. The costs, and the cost of any fines, will all be borne by the PCA, he said at a press conference on Tuesday. In the interim, agencies including the Regional Water Quality Control Board, Monterey County Environmental Health Department, NOAA, the City of Pacific Grove, Pacific Grove Public Works Department, Pacific Grove Police Department, Monterey County Fire Department and Marina Coast Water District were notified and lent assistance. Emergency calls were made to news media enlisting their help in notifying the public in Pacific Grove to curtail use of inside water, and a Reverse 9-1-1 notification went out. There will be continuing assessment and it is unknown how effective the notification was in minimizing water use. Officials including Sciuto, Public Works director Dan Gho, and Councilmember and PCA liaison Rudy Fischer indicate that the mishap should have no adverse effect on the Pacific Grove Small Water Project which involves sewer water and is still on schedule. Sciuto says he's grateful it involved only residential sewage and not industrial chemicals. Citizens in Pacific Grove will be glad when the odor goes away. Be seen by thousands! Call 831-342-4742 about FYI PHOLMAN From Page 1 Holman’s home and a portion of the Holman Building when he was a young man. This was by way of telling the audience how he and the other partners are committed to the city and to the building itself. There will be a 25-foot easement in back of the Holman Building which will allow for emergency vehicle access as well as parking access and which will also take advantage of existing curb cuts. The condominium development envisions 25 condominiums and a number of retail, restaurant, conference and office suites. The project would consist of two luxury penthouse units, 16 three bedroom/two bathroom ocean view units, and seven two bedroom/two bathroom units. Another 25,000 square feet would become retail/office/conference space. The developers indicate that there is some square footage on the second floor that could become community space, and office needs, according to their prospectus. The property is already zoned for a hotel and 25 condominiums/retail spaces but the developers indicated they do not wish to include any hotel space. Times • Page 13 Initial plans call for a number of parking spaces to be allowed, primarily for merchants and future residents, as well as parking underneath the building for residents. Parking for customers would likely be on the street as well as behind the Lighthouse Cinema, where there is an opportunity for valet parking for events which might be held in the envisioned conference spaces at Holman. “We’re anxious to bring back the historicity,” Gash told the City Council. He mentioned that there will be mechanical upgrades as well, and that the glass blocks – added, they believe, in the 1960s – will be coming out. The restaurant, Jennini’s Kitchen, will be staying as will Monterey County Bank. Grove Nutrition will likely be relocated. Kelly Moore Paints will be moving to Country Club Gate. Nader Agha’s antiques business will vacate soon so that restoration work can begin. One of the questions proposed by many concerns water. The Holman Building has a little more than 7.8 water credits, which would roughly equate to 780 residential fixtures, more than enough to carry out the plans the Monterey Capital Corp. has for the building. Roofing & Solar Perfected Visit Our Showroom 2106 Sunset Dr., Pacific Grove 831.375.8158 www.dorityroofing.com Page 14 • CEDAR STREET Times • May 22, 2015 Pride of Pacific Grove 2015 Heritage House Awards The Heritage Society of Pacific Grove held its annual Heritage House Awards ceremony on May 17 at Chautauqua Hall. Ten houses were recognized for either preservation, remodel/ addition, or new construction. Property owners shared stories about their projects, and architects and contractors were introduced.The houses receiving awards are listed below:New Construction (houses that have exemplary designs which contribute to and are compatible with the community of Pacific Grove): 110 Monterey and 759 Bayview; Preservation (houses that have been fixed up but have no additions): 152 Pacific and 314 Wood (bronze award); Remodel/Addition: 413 Congress, 222 19th, 950 14th, 1203 Shell, 1218 Del Monte (bronze award) and 232 Granite (bronze award)A special recognition certificate went to the Little Free Library at 109 Forest.Members of the community nominated the houses, and a panel of judges made the decisions. Photos by Jean Anton. New Construction, 110 Monterey New Construction, 759 Bayview Preservation: 314 Wood (Bronze Award) Preservation, 152 Pacific Remodel, 413 Congress Ave. Remodel, 232 Granite (Bronze Award) Remodel, 1218 Del Monte Blvd. Remodel, 1203 Shell Remodel, 95014th tSt. Preservation: 222 19th St. Little Free Library 109 Forest Ave. May 22, 2015 • CEDAR STREET Times • Page 15 Pacific Grove Sports Ben Alexander Free Youth Open Track Meet Golf Tips Sponsored by Pacific Grove Recreation Department at Pacific Grove High School, Richard Chamberlain Track Saturday, May 30, 2015 FREE - just come & run! ORDER OF EVENTS EVENT # TIME # A Standing Long Jump (6 & under Girls / Boys) 10:00 am # B Softball Throw (6 & under Girls / Boys) 10:00 am # 1 800 m (11 & older Girls) 10:00 am # 2 800 m (11 & older Boys) 10:05 am # 3 50 m (8 & under Girls / Boys) 10:15 am # 4 50 m (9 & 10 Girls / Boys) 10:25 am # C Standing Long Jump (13 & older Girls / Boys) 10:25 am # D Softball Throw (13 & older Girls / Boys) 10:25 am # 5 100 m (8 & under Girls / Boys) 10:40 am # 6 100 m (9 & 10 Girls / Boys) 10:50 am # 7 100 m (11 & 12 Girls / Boys) 11:00 am # 8 100 m (13 & older Girls / Boys) 11:10 am # E Standing Long Jump (11 & 12 Girls / Boys) 11:00 noon # F Softball Throw (11 & 12 Girls / Boys) 11:00 noon # 9 200 m (8 & under Girls / Boys) 11:30 noon # 10 200 m (9 & 10 Girls / Boys) 11:45 pm # 11 200 m (11 & 12 Girls / Boys) 11:55 pm # 12 200 m (13 & older Girls / Boys) 12:00 noon # G Standing Long Jump (10 & under Girls / Boys) 12:00 noon # H Softball Throw (10 & under Girls / Boys) 12:00 noon # 13 1600 m (all age groups Girls / Boys) 12:20 pm # 14 400 m (8 & under Girls / Boys) 1 2 : 3 0 pm # 15 400 m (9 & 10 Girls / Boys) 12:40 pm # 16 400 m (11 & 12 Girls / Boys) 12:45 pm # 17 400 m (13 & Older Girls / Boys) 12:50 pm # 18 4 x 100 m Relay (8 & under Girls / Boys) 1:00 pm # 19 4 x 100 m Relay (9 & 10 Girls / Boys) 1:10 pm # 20 4 x 100 m Relay (11 & 12 Girls / Boys) 1:20 pm # 21 4 x 100 m Relay (13 & Older Girls / Boys) 1:30 pm Notice: All Times are subject to change! Each Agency is responsible for recording their own kid’s times & distances. Stillwell Children’s Pool at Lovers Point Opens Friday, May 22 Noon - 4:30 PM Ben Alexander PGA PGA Teaching Professional, Pacific Grove Golf Links, Bayonet Golf Course PGA Teacher Of The Year, No Cal PGA 831-277-9001 www.benalexandergolf.com Many golfers struggle with squaring up the club face at impact. What I usually hear is “I’m inconsistent.” The way we get consistency is to repeat the correct motor skill or habit. One of the best ways I have found to help my students get consistency is to place two training sticks on the ground about five inches apart and have the player brush the grass without hitting the sticks. This will get you to repeat keeping the club square and then hit some shots to get the motion. Pacific Grove High’s 21st Annual Youth Basketball Camp The camp will focus on basketball skill development, sportsmanship, and fun. Skill development will focus on improving ball handling, passing, and shooting. Players will be divided into age appropriate groups and will beinstructed by Varsity Boys Basketball Coach Dan Powers, his staff, and players. Registration forms are available at our website, www.pghs.org on the Boys Basketball page. Session I : Ages: Boys & girls, Grades K-1 Day/Time: June 8-11, 8:45 am-10:15 am Fee:$70, (includes a Camp T-Shirt and a Ball!) Location:Pacific Grove High School Gym Register: Contact Coach Powers, 646-6590(ext. 284) or email: dpowers@pgusd.org Session II:Ages: Boys & girls, Grades 2-5 Day/Time: June 8-11, 10:30 am-1 pm Fee:$100, (includes a Camp T-Shirtand a Ball!) Location:Pacific Grove High School Gym Session III: Ages: Boys & girls, Grades 6-8 Day/Time:June 15-18, 9am-12pm Fee:$100, (includes a Camp T-Shirtand a Ball!) Location:Pacific Grove High School Gym Free Swim Fri., Sat and Sun. through June 8 Lessons begin June 8 See http://www.cityofpacificgrove.org/index.aspx?page=398 for more information Panther Youth football will hold a free football clinic for the public Children ages 6-13 may attend free of charge on Sunday May 31 from 8:00 a.m. until noon at the Pacific Grove Middle School. Register online at www.pantheryouthfootball.net. Check-in begins at 8:00 and clinic sessions start promptly at 9:00. Children will learn the basics of tackle football with special emphasis on Heads Up Football®, USA Football’s National Initiative to Help Make the Sport of Football Better and Safer. This is a no-contact clinic. Participants will become familiar with tackle football gear, join in a variety of skill development drills, play games, compete in a punt pass & kick competition, win prizes and enjoy a hotdog BBQ with new friends. For questions or further information please visit pantheryouthfootball.net or call Coach Tim at (831) 392-6737 Page 16 • CEDAR STREET Times • May 22, 2015 Harry Wilson as the 2500Year-Old Man (X) Bernard Furman Previous editions of Cedar Street Times can be found at www.cedarstreettimes.com Back issues are located under the tab “Back Issues” Marriage Can Be Funny Harry, as the 2500-year old man, is being interviewed by son-in-law Andy. Andy: In a prior interview you mentioned that you had seen Mount Vesuvius before it erupted. Did you happen to be near when the catastrophe happened? Harry: Oh my, yes. I was in Pompeii and saw the whole thing. A: Pompeii? I read that it was completely covered with many feet of ash generated by the eruption, and everyone there suffocated to death. H: Not me. A: How come? H: I had an umbrella. A: And that saved you? H: Absolutely. A good umbrella can serve many purposes. That’s why the English always carry them. A: But there are no volcanoes in England. H: You never know when one might pop up. A: On another subject: is it true that Nero fiddled while Rome burned? H: That’s not the whole story. You see, Nero loved to play the violin and had rehearsed for many weeks for a private recital he was going to give in his palace’s concert hall. A: And you know this how? H: I was his violin teacher. A: I see. Please go on. H: Well, came the night of the performance and the hall was packed and Nero was ready to start, when all of a sudden someone yelled, “Rome is on fire!” We all rushed to the windows, and sure enough we could see the flames. Nero said to me, “Should we cancel?” and I said, “The show must go on!” So you see, the kid got a bad rap. A: Did you ever watch any of the gladiator contests in the coliseum? H: Watch? I was in them! A: You were a gladiator? H: I certainly was---one of the best, and never defeated. A: How did you manage to do that? H: I developed what I called my “hit and run” strategy. A: What was that? H: As soon as my opponent and I entered the arena, I hit him on the arm or leg with my sword or shield, and ran away. Naturally, he chased me. I ran faster, so did he. And then I’d stop short, jump up and turn around while still in the air, and extend my sword straight out; and because he couldn’t stop in time, he’d run into it and stab himself to death. A: That always worked? H: You betcha! Twenty times in a row. A: How come the other gladiators never caught on? H: They weren’t very bright. A: Were you rewarded for your astounding achievement? H: Yep. They gave me my freedom and the concession to sell gelato anywhere in Rome I wanted to. A; What was your favorite location? H: The Forum. A: Did you happen to be there when Julius Caesar was assassinated? H: I was, and can tell you the whole story, which is far different from what’s in the history books. A: Please do so. H: Unlike what everyone believes, Caesar was not murdered because of the fear that he wanted to become dictator. A: So what was the problem? H: Gay marriage. A: Gay marriage! How did that come into the picture? H: Many of the Senators were gay. That’s why they wore those white gowns. A: Togas. H: They looked like gowns to me. Anyway, there was a faction, led by Caesar, that wanted to legalize gay marriage. And there was a faction, led by Brutus, that opposed it. A: Why? H: Because they objected to the expense of paying for the spouse’s pension and health benefits. ---The debate went on for months, and was finally going to come to a head on the fatal day. Because it looked like the vote might not go the way he wanted, Brutus persuaded a couple of his buddies to join him in assassinating Julie. A: What’s your position on the legalization of gay marriage? H: I’m all for it. A: And your rationale is….? H: Why shouldn’t gays be as miserable as the rest of us? Legal Notices FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number 20150967 The following person is doing business as: FISHNET AQUAPONICS, 1001 Madison Street, Monterey, Monterey County, CA 93940. KERSTIN ANNA PARR, 001 Madison Street, Monterey,, CA 93940. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Monterey County on May 4, 2015. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on 5/04/15. Signed, Kerstin Parr. This business is conducted by an individual. Publication dates: 5/22, 5/29, 6/5, 6/12/15 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number 20150965 The following person is doing business as: BRIGHT AND SHINE CLEANING SERVICE, 226 Cypress Ave. #1, Marina, Monterey County, CA 93933. SCOTT CHARLAND, 226 Cypress Ave. #1, Marina, CA 93933. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Monterey County on May 4, 2015. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on n/a. Signed, Scott Charland. This business is conducted by an individual. Publication dates: 5/8, 5/15, 5/22, 5/30/15 Call 831-324-4742 about placing legal notices FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number 20150988 The following person is doing business as: MICROCITO, 3229 Martin Circle, Marina, Monterey County, CA 93933. ROBIN J. COWELL, 3229 Martin Circle, Marina, CA 93933. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Monterey County on May 6, 2015. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on 5/6/2015. Signed, Robin J. Cowell. This business is conducted by an individual. Publication dates: 5/8, 5/15, 5/22, 5/30/15 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number 20150943 The following person is doing business as: CHARADE SALON, 220 17th Unit C, Pacific Grove, Monterey County, CA 93950. JUDY LOPEZ, 859 Maple St., Pacific Grove, CA 93950 and JOHNNY T. LOPEZ, 859 Maple St., Pacific Grove, CA 93950. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Monterey County on April 30, 2015. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on 3/3/1996. Signed, Johnny T. Lopez. This business is conducted by a married couple. Publication dates: 5/8, 5/15, 5/22, 5/30/15 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number 20150897 The following person is doing business as: TRI-CALIFORNIA EVENTS, INC. and ETERNAL TIMING and TRI-CAL RENTALS T.C. RENTALS, 1284 Adobe Lane, Pacific Grove, Monterey County, CA 93950. TRI-CALIFORNIA EVENTS, INC. (CALIFORNIA), 1284 Adobe Lane, Pacific Grove, CA 93950. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Monterey County on April 23, 2015. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on 6/1/97. Signed, Terry Davis, President/CEO Tri-California Events, Inc. This business is conducted by a corporation. Publication dates: 5/1, 5/8, 5/15, 5/22/15 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number 20150914 The following person is doing business as: RELIABLE PLUMBING & HEATING SERVICES, 449 Redwood Ave., Sand City, Monterey County, CA 93955. JOHN CHARLES ETTER, 3384 San Benancio Rd., Salinas, CA 93908. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Monterey County on April 24, 2015. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on 4/20/15. Signed, John Charles Etter. This business is conducted by an individual. Publication dates: 5/1, 5/8, 5/15, 5/22/15 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number 20150908 The following person is doing business as: COWELL SYSTEMS and COWELL COMPUTERS, 3229 Martin Circle, Marina, Monterey County, CA 93933. ROBIN J. COWELL, 3229 Martin Circle, Marina, CA 93933. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Monterey County on April 24, 2015. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on 04/24/15. Signed, Robin J. Cowell This business is conducted by an individual. Publication dates: 5/1, 5/8, 5/15, 5/22/15 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number 20150939 The following person is doing business as: ARNOLD J. PEREZ JR. PRIVATE UBER DRIVER, 1045 Olympic Ave. #4, Seaside, Monterey County, CA 93955. ARNOLD JOSEPH PEREZ JR., 1045 Olympia Ave. #4, Seaside, CA 93955. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Monterey County on April 24, 2015. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on 02/27/15. Signed, Arnold Joseph Perez Jr. This business is conducted by an individual. Publication dates: 5/1, 5/8, 5/15, 5/22/15 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number 20150842 The following person is doing business as: MONTEREY MYSTERY SHOPPING, 2560 Garden Rd., Ste. 105, Monterey, Monterey County, CA 93940. INCREBRESCO, INC., 2560 Garden Rd. Ste. 105, Monterey, CA 93940. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Monterey County on April 15, 2015. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on 7/1/10. Signed, Fran O'Hagan, CFO. This business is conducted by a corporation Publication dates: 5/1, 5/8, 5/15, 5/22/15 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number 20150898 The following person is doing business as: TRIFECTA WORLD EVENTS, INC., 1284 Adobe Lane, Pacific Grove, Monterey County, CA 93950. TRIFECTA WORLD EVENTS, INC. (CALIFORNIA), 1284 Adobe Lane, Pacific Grove, CA 93950. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Monterey County on April 23, 2015. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on 6/27/2011. Signed, Terry Davis, President/CEO Trifecta Events, Inc. This business is conducted by a corporation. Publication dates: 5/1, 5/8, 5/15, 5/22/15 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number 20150832 The following person is doing business as: IN HARMONY BODYWORK, 26135 Carmel Rancho Blvd., Suite F-25, Carmel, Monterey County, CA 93923. LOUISA CURLEY, 1540 Prescott Ave., Monterey, CA 93940. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Monterey County on April 15, 2015. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on n/a. Signed, Louisa Curley. This business is conducted by an individual. Publication dates: 5/1, 5/8, 5/15, 5/22/15 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number 20150899 The following person is doing business as: PARAPHRASE PRODUCTIONS, 1284 Adobe Lane, Pacific Grove, Monterey County, CA 93950. PAUL JONATHAN DAVIS, 1284 Adobe Lane, Pacific Grove, CA 93950. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Monterey County on April 23, 2015. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on n/a. Signed, Paul Davis. This business is conducted by an individual. Publication dates: 5/1, 5/8, 5/15, 5/22/15 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number 20150901 The following person is doing business as: SALINAS MITSUBISHI, 151 Auto Center Cir., Salinas, Monterey County, CA 93907. COVA MOTORS, INC., 151 Auto Center Cir., Salinas, CA 93907. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Monterey County on April 23, 2015. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on 4/30/2007. Signed, Francisco Covarrubias, President. This business is conducted by a corporation. Publication dates: 5/1, 5/8, 5/15, 5/22/15 May 22, 2015 • CEDAR STREET Important Changes in Education Under Way It's Going to be a Whole New Way of Looking at Learning Times • Page 17 Save Our Shores offers tips for a litter-free Memorial Day The nonprofit also seeks volunteers for Holiday Relief Cleanups on May 26 An Open Letter from Nancy Kotowski, Ph.D. Monterey County Superintendent of Schools It’s been 15 years since we ushered in the new millennium and wondered what was ahead. Today, our children are part of an increasingly interconnected, global society. Great changes in education for our students are necessary to prepare them well for success. These changes are now well under way in how schools are funded, how students are taught, and how students are tested. There are lots of questions about what is happening, and how we are supporting our students and teachers. Let’s begin with the new state funding formula for schools, called the Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF). Now, local communities have greater control of education dollars, with more resources being dedicated to our students with the greatest needs. In addition, a Local Control Accountability Plan (LCAP) is required. The school district’s budget is based on this local plan designed to accomplish the district’s goals for student achievement. Parents, students, teachers, staff and community members now have a voice over local priorities and goals. [Pacific Grove Unified School District’s LCAP was completed this week and is now online at http://www.pgusd.org/agendas/1415/052115bp.pdf page 5] In addition to changes in funding, there are new state academic standards that call for higher order thinking and project-based learning. No longer are the days of memory-based learning, multiple choice assessments, or “teaching to a test.” Teachers and students engage on a much deeper level. Students are now being asked to demonstrate their abilities to access a variety of information sources, analyze, problem solve, and provide written evidence of how they reached conclusions. Teachers are emphasizing the importance of reading challenging content multiple times. You can step into the classroom to see two examples of the kinds of performance tasks students are doing by going to MCOE’s 2014-2015 Education Report to the Community (available online at http://www.mcoeannualen. org/). You will gain insight into how a 9th grade English Language Arts class is studying the Gettysburg Address today, and how parents can support upper elementary grade students in mathematics and science at home by analyzing their water bill together, and planning to reduce water consumption by the family. Along with new ways of teaching, come new ways of testing student progress. Monterey County students in grades 3-8 and grade 11 are now taking the state’s new computer-based tests called the California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress (CAASPP). Multiple-choice, fill-in-thebubble tests are a thing of the past. Students are now in the process of taking the new tests for the first time. Today’s new assessments simulate real-life problem solving and critical thinking skills. Because these tests are computer adaptive, they provide students a wide range of questions tailored to identify the knowledge and skills they have mastered. These new tests provide a clearer measurement of the skills students need when they graduate, and the results will be available quickly to teachers, schools and parents. The scores will give teachers and parents timely information to help students develop the critical thinking and problem solving skills they will need to succeed in the next stages of their lives. These new tests are also designed to measure student growth over time, which was not possible in California’s previous system. Because these are new tests, the results are not comparable to earlier scores. Instead, this year’s assessments results will establish a baseline for the progress we expect students to make over time It will take time for teachers, students, and parents to adjust to the new methods. Just like the standards they measure, these tests are more challenging and scores will reflect that. Knowing the bar has been raised, students will need time and support to make significant progress to reach the standards, so statewide test results will not be published this year. Our students are more engaged in their learning, and they are acquiring the knowledge, skills and abilities that are needed to succeed in the world today. Working and learning together, we will prepare all of our students for success at each step of their educational journey in today’s world. Nancy Kotowski, Ph.D. Monterey County Superintendent of Schools Transform your negative beliefs. . . transform your life. Rabia Erduman, CHT, CMP, RPP, CST Author of Veils of Separation 831-277-9029 www.wuweiwu.com Therapeutic Massage • Trauma Release Craniosacral Therapy • Polarity Therapy Transpersonal Hypnotherapy • Reiki CDs: Chakra Meditation, Relaxation, Meditation, Inner Guides Save Our Shores’ Sanctuary Steward Petra Mottishaw promotes clean beaches by handing out garbage bags to visitors. Save Our Shores (SOS), the leader in ocean awareness, advocacy and action on the Central Coast, asks beachgoers to celebrate responsibly this Memorial Day by packing sustainably and picking up all garbage before sunset. Trash left on the beach becomes pollution in the water and poses a dangerous threat to marine life, locals and visitors alike. To help reduce the amount of trash on the beach, Save Our Shores will be distributing garbage bags and reminding beachgoers to pick up after themselves from 1-4 p.m. on Monday, May 25 at Panther Beach, Cowell/Main Beach, Capitola Beach, Seacliff State Beach and Del Monte Beach. Then on Tuesday, May 26, SOS will lead Holiday Relief Cleanups at Panther Beach, Cowell/Main Beach, Capitola Beach and Del Monte Beach from 9-11 a.m. All are welcome to lend a hand. SOS will provide all cleanup supplies, but volunteers are encouraged to bring reusable buckets and gloves. “After years of coordinating a successful Holiday Relief program for the Fourth of July, Save Our Shores expanded the program to include Memorial Day,” said Rachel Kippen, SOS Program Manager. “We are optimistic that our outreach efforts will lead to a cleaner environment long after the holiday.” Save Our Shores offers these five tips for a litter-free Memorial Day: 1. Pack all food and beverages in reusable containers and bring your own utensils. 2. Transport your food, party supplies, and personal belongings in reusable bags. 3. If barbecuing, make sure hot coals are safely disposed of, so they don’t burn others. 4. Avoid bringing Styrofoam items, as they often break into pieces that are difficult to clean up. 5. If you cannot take garbage home with you, find a trash can or dumpster to dispose of it properly. ABOUT SAVE OUR SHORES: Save Our Shores (SOS) is the Central Coast leader in caring for the marine environment through ocean awareness, advocacy and citizen action. Its core initiatives are Plastic Pollution, Ocean Awareness and Clean Boating. Over the last 30 years, SOS has been locally responsible for helping to establish the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary, preventing offshore oil drilling and cruise ship pollution, and bringing together diverse stakeholders to find common solutions to ocean issues. Today, SOS focuses on educating youth about local watersheds, tackling plastic pollution at local beaches and rivers, supporting habitat conservation efforts, implementing the nationally renowned Dockwalker program and providing the community with Sanctuary Stewards. We are proud of the reputation we have earned. Elizabeth Drew 12 Years of Service Our vision is to be recognized as the most professional, ethical and highest quality funeral service provider on the Monterey Peninsula. We always go the extra mile in helping people. We are committed to offering the highest level of service by always listening and responding to the needs of those we serve. 390 Lighthouse Avenue, PG Call 831-375-4191 or visit www.ThePaulMortuary.com FD-280 Page 18 • CEDAR STREET Times • May 22, 2015 Smile, You’re on Stage at Pacific Grove’s Center for the Performing Arts By Nicole Martin, Special to Cedar Street Times Thanks to Peter Funt and his dad Allen, nearly a million Americans have been told, "smile, you're on Candid Camera!" What the rest of the nation doesn't know is that a large percentage of folks "caught" are right here on the Monterey Peninsula. "The towns on the Peninsula are our secret ingredients," said Peter, as he prepared for a special Candid Camera celebration May 30. The live stage show, at the Pacific Grove Center for Performing Arts, will feature dozens of hilarious clips plus behind-the-scenes insights about the making of TV's longest running entertainment show. "We're the only TV show in history to have produced new episodes in each of the last eight decades," explained Peter. "My father started in 1948 and we've been at it ever since." The latest run was just last summer on the TV Land channel. The May 30 show is a benefit for the Monterey County Film Commission. "Our county has been home to this TV classic ever since Allen Funt moved here from New York in the late 1970s," said Jeff Clark, MCFC Board President. "The Funts have shot over 150 sequences here. We thought it was time to honor the show and to hear Peter's hilarious tales about being America's most renowned eavesdropper." Peter has been doing his live stage show around the country to great reviews. "We have thousands of sequences to draw from," he notes, "so we can illustrate almost any point. You want to laugh about gas prices, the dentist, taxes, social media? You name it, and we've got a funny clip for you." Asked why the Monterey Peninsula has been such fertile territory for his show, Peter replied, "Well, to be candid, it's handy because I live here. But more importantly, we have such a rich mixture of cultures and occupations. Shoot one day in Salinas, the next day in Pacific Grove and then in downtown Monterey, and viewers think you've traveled a thousand miles." Among the highlights of the May 30 show will be a Gregory Czar Poetry Ether of the Spirit’s Kiss In early days when Pacific Grove had not yet bloomed, the lovers of Jesus Christ pitched canvas tents around the rocky point, their wind worn peaks bent toward heaven like perched waves across the bay. As pioneers of California’s central coast their sanctuary rose like spring currents, a seaside village of Victorian lath and plaster inspired by coral morning tide’s melodic prayer. Pure as firelight shadows dancing in the sand, their hearts brushed with tender shades of faith, the settlers of Lovers Point gathered as tangled seaweed on the shore. Hand in hand in living tapestry, threads of life woven in an opus of the rolling sea, their hymn sung high in seagulls’ flight, soaring as angel’s breath into nature’s unsullied realm. - Gregory C. Czar Peter Funt, Performing Sat. May 30 unique package of Candid Camera gags shot in Monterey County. Several audience members will get a chance to join Peter on stage to answer Candid trivia questions and win prizes. In addition to his Candid Camera work, Peter writes a syndicated newspaper column and has appeared on many top talk shows. He's currently at work on a new version of Candid Camera for early 2016. Tickets for the 7 p.m. show on Saturday, May 30 may be purchased online through the website: www. CandidCamera.com or by phoning the Film Commission at 646-0910. Greg Czar grew ip in Pacific Grove and has written a number of pieces about the town that he wishes to share with current residents. He is a clinical psychologist and lives in Lake Oswego, OR. Did you do something notable? The Geography of Well-Being Kevin Stone at editor@cedarstreettimes.com Monterey County Assocation of Realtors Have your peeps email our peeps Help us promote the FEAST OF LANTERNS by advertising in this yearʼs program! Weʼre pleased to produce the annual program. We will print 10,000 copies and distribute it county-wide. Stories about the Feast of Lanterns, past & present pictures, the schedule, and more! YOUR AD HELPS US PROMOTE IT! 1/10 (5 wide x 2 tall) .............................$75 1/5 (5 wide x 4.25 tall) ..........................$125 1/4 (5 wide x 5 tall) .............................$150 1/2 (5 wide x 10.25 tall or 10.25 wide x 5 tall) .........$275 Full page (10.25 wide x 10.25 tall) ..............$500 Space reservation June 12 Ad art deadline June 26 Special home delivery July 17 Call Dana Goforth or Marge Ann Jameson 831-324-4742 dana@cedarstreettimes.com editor@cedarstreettimes.com A new index takes a holistic look at America's inequalities. The report, “Geographies of Opportunity: Ranking Well-Being by Congressional District,” is an in-depth look at how residents of America’s 436 congressional districts are faring in three fundamental areas of life: Health, access to knowledge, and living standards. The report stems from the Social Science Research Council’s Measure of America project. The hallmark of this work is the American Human Development Index, a supplement to GDP and other money metrics that tell the story of how ordinary Americans are faring. The top ten congressional districts in terms of human development (HD) are all in the greater metropolitan areas of LA, NYC, San Francisco, and DC. Life expectancy remains extremely uneven across the country. In sections of Mississippi, West Virginia and Kentucky, life expectancy remains at 73 years of age, about the same as it was for the nation as a whole in 1980. Life expectancy is far greater in the Northeast corridor, along the West Coast of California, in retirement areas along Florida’s southern coast, in Seattle, suburban Dallas, and around Denver and Boulder, Colorado. In these places, people can expect to live up to eight years longer than the national average. The areas of highest knowledge access are concentrated in parts of L.A., the San Francisco Bay Area, and Seattle in the West; the Boston-New York-D.C. corridor in the east; Orem and Provo in Utah; Dallas and Houston in Texas; the Twin Cities of Minneapolis-St. Paul; Denver and Boulder; and in the suburbs of Detroit. The gap in earnings is considerable and divides exist not only between regions and metros but within. One of the districts with the lowest earnings ($20,100 annually) is California's 34th, which covers downtown L.A. That’s just a few miles from California’s 33rd, where a median income of $51,300 puts it in the top ten earning districts in the country. The higher the proportion of foreign-born residents in a congressional district, the longer the district’s life expectancy. African Americans fare particularly poorly on health indicators. Whites outlive African Americans by 3.6 years; African Americans have higher death rates from a variety of causes, chief among them heart disease, cancer, homicide, diabetes, and infant death. Learn about Pacific Grove’s new Green Waste Recovery program Exciting changes are coming to Pacific Grove in August when the City switches to a new waste hauler, GreenWaste Recovery, Inc. Come and discover what’s in store as Emily Finn discusses innovative and cutting-edge practices for diverting waste from landfills. Wednesday, June 10, 7 pm, Pacific Grove Museum of Natural History, corner of Forest and Central Avenues in Pacific Grove. Hosted by Sustainable Pacific Grove. For more information, email denyse.f@att.net <mailto:denyse.f@att.net> or visit www.sustainablepg.org <http://www.sustainablepg.org/>. F.Y.I. May 22, 2015 • CEDAR STREET ATTORNEY JOSEPH BILECI JR. Attorney at Law Wills/Trusts/Estates; Real Estate Transactions/Disputes; Contract/ Construction Law 215 W. Franklin, Ste. 216, Monterey, CA 93940 831-920-2075 At Your Service! ENTERTAINMENT HARDWOOD FLOORS Holland Garcia Piano Studio Piano Lessons All Ages & Levels Royal Conservatory Graduate hollandgarcia@sbcglobal.net (831) 624-5615 Cal. Licensed Real Estate Broker #01104712 BLINDS Times • Page 19 PIANO LESSONS PLUMBING Call 831-238-5282 www.montereybaybelles.blogspot.com Don’t throw those old blinds away! MOBILE SERVICE Any style blinds/window coverings Repair Restoration • Cleaning • Installation • • 831-915-7874 Monterey Blind Repair MontereyCompleteWindows.com CLEANING FLOORING/WINDOW COVERING HAULING GRAND AVENUE FLOORING & INTERIORS HAULING CLEAN-UPS R E PA I R S Home Town Service Since 1979 TWO GIRLS FROM CARMEL PHONE: 831-626-4426 EXPERIENCED • PROFESSIONAL • BONDED MBIG Cleaning Full Service • House cleaning • Carpet cleaning • Auto detailing • Landscaping • Construction License # 1004688 License # 903204 AREA RUGS • CARPET • CORK • HARDWOOD • LAMINATE • VINYL UPHOLSTERY • WINDOW COVERINGS WWW.GRANDAVEFLOORING.COM 831-372-0521 President 831-224-0630 CONSTRUCTION Lic. # 700124 PROPERTY INSPECTION Lic. # 588515 CA Lic # 675298 GARAGE DOORS www.lighthousedoorandgate.com Garage Door and Motor Service, Repair & Installation. Steel, Wood, or Aluminum Garage Doors. Showroom: 1213 Forest Ave., Pacific Grove 831.655.1419 CA Lic #900218 GARDEN/YARD MAINTENANCE Stewards to the Green World 831-402-1347 Reasonably priced • Qualified and Experienced Historic Renovations Kitchens • Windows • Doors • Decks • Remodeling INC. www.edmondsconstruction.com 3-D CAD drawings - Lic. 349605 GardenLandscapeMaintenance Planting - Fertilizing - Mulching - Weed Control Insect Control - Edging and Cultivating - Staking - Winter Protection - Rototilling - Sod Sprinkler Installation - Drip Systems Roberto Damian 831-241-4402 GATES www.lighthousedoorandgate.com Remodeling • Kitchens Bathrooms • Additions • Remodels Fencing • Decking 831.655.3821 krconstructioninc@msn.com • Lic. #700124 KITCHEN & BATH REMODELING Mike Millette, Owner 831-277-8101 mikejmillette@gmail.com Lic. #976468 Facebook.com/Millette Construction DRIVEWAYS & WALKWAYS Gate Service, Repair & Installation. Fabricate Custom Wood & Steel. We work on any motors. Showroom: 1213 Forest Ave., Pacific Grove 831.655.1419 GOLD BUYER MONTEREY GOLD & COIN EXCHANGE 831-521-3897 303-1 Grand Ave. CASH FOR GOLD We Buy It All Highest Prices Paid INC. Driveways • Concrete • Pavers • Asphalt • DG Walkways • Stone • Hardscape krconstructioninc@msn.com • Lic. #700124 Kitchen and Bath Remodel Full Service Kevin Robinson 831.655.3821 PUBLISHING krconstructioninc@msn.com • Lic. #700124 LANDSCAPING • Residential and Commercial Landscape and Maintenance • Irrigation and Drainage • Installation and Renovation • Landscape Design • Horticulture Consultation Free estimate and consultation in most cases! HANDYMAN FAVALORO CONSTRUCTION Is your home ready for winter? I can help, call Joseph 831-649-1469•Lic. # 743967 CRAFT YOUR LEGACY • 649-6640 Guided Memoir & Other Book Services Park Place Publications • Since 1983 Patricia Hamilton, Publisher • Joyce Krieg, Associate 591 Lighthouse Avenue PG • Call for a FREE consultation UPHOLSTERY 831-375-5508 rayres@ayreslandscaping.net CA C27 Landscape Contractor, Lic. # 432067 Qualified Presticide Applicator, Cert. # C18947 MORTUARY THE PAUL MORTUARY 390 Lighthouse Avenue · Pacific Grove 831-375-4191 · www.thepaulmortuary.com Painting and Decorating Company Free Estimates Interior/Exterior Painting Residential & Commercial Bonded and Insured Off: (831) 392-0327 PETS 831-324-3388 831-521-8195 jeffreygstephenson@gmail.com KAYMAN KLEAN WINDOWS G n d gndcustompainting@gmail.com All Types of Furniture Welcome WINDOW CLEANING PAINTING Cell: (831) 277-9730 Expert Furniture Repairs Free Quotes FD-280 CA Lic #900218 831.655.3821 831.655.3821 INC. Gilberto Manzo Reasonable Rates Mike Torre 831-372-2500/Msg. 831-915-5950 Trenchless Piping • Drain Cleaning Sewer Line Replacement Video Drain Inspection Hydro Jet Cleaning Power Washing Chandeliers Discounts Available KaymanBenettiDotCom 707-344-1848 benetti.kayman@yahoo.com Lic. 988217 YARD MAINTENANCE Bordwell’s Yard Maintenance & Window Cleaning Weeding • Trimming • Mowing & Blowing Inside & Outside Windows Clean up and haul away Whatever it takes to keep your property looking great! Call for a FREE estimate 831-917-4410Bordwell33@gmail.com Page 20 • CEDAR STREET Times OPEN SAT & SUN 1-4 • May 22, 2015 OPEN SUN2-4 OPEN SUN 2:30-4 PEBBLE BEACH | 1032 San Carlos Road Adjacent to the second hole on MPCC Shore Course, this newly remodeled 3BR/3.5BA home has high quality finishes and materials. $2,950,000 PACIFIC GROVE | 315 Crocker Ave. | $2,495,000 Mediterranean home close to Asilomar Beach. Formal entry solid wood beams in the living, dining and kitchen. Custom cabinetry, oversized island. MONTEREY | 580 El Dorado Street Classic 1926 Alta Mesa Mediterranean 3BR/3.5BA estate with 1BR/1BA guest house. Gated property on .7 acres with a 2,200+ sq.ft patio. $1,895,000 Scott O’Brien 831.620.2351 Debby Beck 831.915.9710 Brad Towle 831.224.3370 OPEN SAT 2-4, SUN 11-1 OPEN SAT 2-4 MONTEREY/SALI NAS HWY | $1,875,000 Overlooking “Pastures of Heaven” is this contemporary ranch-style 3BR/3BA home on 3.2 acres. Contiguous lot is 1.1 acres, 4.3 acres total PEBBLE BEACH | 3030 Stevenson Drive Extraordinary 3BR/2BA home upgraded with many extras and the finest materials. Chef’s kitchen and a master suite with fireplace. $1,400,000 MONTEREY | 599 David Avenue First time available in almost 40 years. This 3-unit triplex is located in the sunbelt of Monterey with ocean views. $1,050,000 Michele Altman 831.214.2545 Lisa Brom 831.682.0126 Bowhay Gladney Randazzo 831.236.0814 PACIFIC GROVE | 252 Grove Acre Avenue This 2BR/1BA home offers new hardwood floors and windows, low maintenance yard & close to the ocean. $625,000 PEBBLE BEACH | $600,000 A stunning double lot comprising .54 acres. Includes approved plans for a remarkable 2,509 sf 3BR/3BA view home. Lots of water. MONTERRA | $550,000 Lot 26 in the gated community. Beautiful, gently sloped parcel in a sunny neighborhood. Purchase includes Tehama Social Fitness membership Bill Bluhm 831.277.2782 Dave Randall 831.241.8871 Mike Jashinski 831.236.8913 OPEN SAT 2-4, SUN 1-3 MONTEREY PENINSULA BROKERAGE | sothebyshomes.com/monterey Pacific Grove 831.372.7700 | Carmel-by-theSea 831.624.9700 Carmel Rancho 831.624.9700 | Carmel Valley 831.659.2267 | Monterra Ranch 831.625.2075 Sotheby’s International Realty and the Sotheby’s International Realty logo are registered (or unregistered) service marks used with permission. Operated by Sotheby’s International Realty, Inc. Visit onlywithus.com to discover the benefits available through us alone.